Second, the history of these islands is illuminated by archaeology to a quite extraordinary extent. |
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The medical superintendent had a long involvement with archaeology and craniology. |
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Jaromir Malek studied Egyptology and archaeology at Charles University, Prague. |
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We're looking at archaeology, of course, which is a record of prehistoric cultural evidence found in the ground. |
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Piotrovsky has also earmarked a further building in St Petersburg for a separate space to display artefacts from the archaeology department. |
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My father was an architectural historian, so I was pulled into archaeology and an obsession with Egyptology very early. |
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She became a couture model in the 1950s before quitting to study archaeology at London University. |
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Other disciplines have been brought to bear on the subject, including archaeology, cartography, and historical geography. |
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Joyce studied Egyptology and archaeology at Liverpool University and Oxford, where she met fellow student Steven. |
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He lectured on poetry, grammar, history, politics, archaeology, mathematics and astronomy. |
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The French discoverer circulated plaster casts of the skull to major names in archaeology before publishing his findings. |
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The new methods had a major impact on urban archaeology, as the town became envisaged more as an organic whole. |
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Here there is still a major task of rescue archaeology to be done, because the site is being rapidly eroded. |
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My MA was in the same kind of anthropology, although my thesis focussed on Andean archaeology and ethnohistory. |
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The two tropes are geology and archaeology integrated into an anecdotal, memorialising narrative form that demands admiration for its adroitness. |
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After studying archaeology at Cambridge University, he became curator of prehistory at the Museum of London. |
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References to almost every field of knowledge, from archaeology to zoology, are as likely as not to be wrong. |
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This rip-roaring growth, however, has left other areas of archaeology totally overshadowed. |
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Ironically among the largest grants made was for archaeology, museum conservation and the teaching of ancient Mesopotamian languages. |
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This all started when I was an archaeology under-graduate doing an essay on archaeoastronomy. |
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I am not a professional archaeologist, but a member of the public with an interest in archaeology and history. |
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Nowadays, scarcely a week goes by without archaeology on television and in the major newspapers. |
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The right students will be able to proceed to a research degree in archaeology or landscape studies. |
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The purpose of archaeology is to understand the past by studying its material culture. |
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In its broadest sense, archaeometry represents the interface between archaeology and the natural and physical sciences. |
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Today the Turkish government prevents scholars from working in the fields of Armenian archaeology and demographics. |
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I came late to archaeology, having studied art history at undergraduate level. |
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Even a book he assiduously promoted on prehistoric archaeology sold in hundreds of thousands. |
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One of the main aims of this Trail is to open the world of archaeology to people beyond the boffins. |
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The area of low-lying swamp or marsh, as revealed through archaeology, is shown in brown. |
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Tony had been mad keen on archaeology since boyhood and, as his granddad was a market gardener, was already skilled at digging. |
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Magnetometry is nowadays the most efficient non-destructive geophysical method of modern archaeology. |
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She stressed the city council was not abandoning archaeology and would still employ a team of archaeologists. |
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Cemeteries, tombs, and mausoleums are described from the point of view of art history and archaeology. |
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As so often these days, a study of the past of archaeology throws up revealing insights into modern intellectual culture. |
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Athena Review, journal of archaeology, history and exploration, invites you to send for more information on a free issue. |
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What was intended to be a six-week project turned into a six-month study of Eskimo archaeology and anthropology. |
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Whether doing code archaeology or building the next killer application, this is one of those products that should be in every tool kit. |
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The walkers will enjoy their trek through landscapes filled with history, archaeology and mythology. |
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Complementing the historical data are the resources of archaeology and my own specialty, bioarchaeology. |
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Ancient burial sites across Salisbury Plain could soon be fenced off to prevent badgers from tunnelling through the archaeology. |
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In Orkney it is tying a strength in archaeology to that subject's importance to local tourism. |
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Efficient, fast, cheap and ultra-clean, this subway system not only offers archaeology and contemporary art, it sings to you too. |
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Postgraduate archaeology students can become members, if they are working on closely relevant subjects. |
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A team from the Oxford Archaeological Unit was engaged to excavate and reveal the archaeology for a public audience. |
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In addition, there are historical photos from expeditions pertaining to scientific studies of Arctic archaeology, glaciology, and geology. |
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The search would be most effective if it involved the fields of archaeology, historical linguistics and genetics. |
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It has four boats and employs 60 divers, whose skills include archaeology, history, epigraphy and numismatics. |
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What is being generated is largely a random sample of previously unknown archaeology. |
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He often lectured to outside bodies on his many artistic interests including numismatics, Coptic textiles, and archaeology. |
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A specialist in the social and economic archaeology of Early Medieval Britain, he is currently researching non-urban coastal market sites. |
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The study of literature, says Hines, vivifies material culture, while archaeology enriches critical reading. |
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Nine out of 10 professional archaeologists are graduates, but university training is not always suited to field archaeology. |
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The proposals include no detraction from the archaeology as this has been, and will be carefully researched, preserved, and protected. |
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The prize goes to his splendidly illustrated book on the archaeology and aesthetics of the Renaissance culture. |
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As with all great bands, such archaeology doesn't detract one iota, but allows us to indulge in a kind of aural watch repairing. |
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The application of a multivocal approach to Roman archaeology represents a particular challenge. |
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The programme leader for the archaeology BSc degree intermeddled in the exam marking process. |
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It proved, she claims, that imagination can be valuably researched in a variety of disciplines, not least evolutionary studies and archaeology. |
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Contrary to Garrison's suggestion, radiocarbon dating is not the only discovery to truly revolutionize archaeology or archaeological dating. |
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Subsequent radiocarbon dating of the bones and tools proved that they were as old as Kennewick Man and of immense value to archaeology. |
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For one thing, a judge of the Allahabad High Court wanted to use archaeology as a means to adjudicate upon a dispute concerning property rights. |
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He was disappointed to hear that there were fewer opportunities for archaeology to thrive through extramural classes and continuing education. |
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For the others, he was majoring in archaeology and forensics, and I was taking courses in law and jurisprudence. |
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The south range, with a prospect over the sea, was probably the principal residence, though now inaccessible to archaeology. |
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From an academic standpoint, his work marks a turning point in Monacan archaeology and the overall understanding of Monacan ethnohistory. |
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Mr Wynn, an 18-year-old archaeology student at the University of York, managed to escape and raise the alarm. |
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I studied prehistory and archaeology at Sheffield University, and then specialised in scientific methods in archaeology at Bradford. |
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Yet conservation of this heritage is a century behind terrestrial archaeology, and as public fascination with it increases, so do the threats. |
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By the late 1990s, the need for a more systematic programme of rescue archaeology had become urgent. |
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The awkward relationship between archaeology and history is an old problem. |
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These cities had lain undisturbed until an inquiring mind combined with cutting edge marine archaeology techniques revealed them to the world again. |
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Until archaeology has a strong presence in all politicians' postbags, they will continue to feel able to treat it as irrelevant to 21st century Britain. |
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The loricae themselves, in all cases, seems to be rather stylized, with far more and narrower horizontal bands than any type known from archaeology. |
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The museum houses exhibits of both cultural and natural history items of the Transkei, including local birds, mammals, geology, archaeology and Xhosa culture. |
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Well he had gone to Oxford and studied classical archaeology when people like Arthur Evans the famous excavator of Crete was there, it must have been an exciting time. |
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A major branch of study within archaeology that draws on archaeological, historical geography, human geography, ecology, anthropology, and place-name studies. |
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Various kinds are available, but the most commonly used in archaeology is the fluxgate gradiometer with the direction-responsive sensors between 0.5m and 2.0m apart. |
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When people die, they leave signs of their presence in the world, in the form of their dwelling places, burial mounds, and artefacts, in a word, their archaeology. |
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There is a wealth of entertainment and enlightenment in the many programmes for niche audiences, ranging from gardening and cookery to archaeology, wildlife, and art. |
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Fans of archaeology shouldn't miss the Istanbul Archaeological Museums which are exhibiting the Sarcophagus of Alexander the Great and various Lydian tombs. |
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Occasionally it is also an infuriatingly unscholarly discussion of some of the more important passages of the recent history of archaeology in Australia. |
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One is an Army captain with a master's degree in archaeology. |
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There are several new courses on offer and with archaeology showing as a subject many people wish to study it is to be expanded into new topic areas. |
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I also have no doubt that when practiced by someone with a good practical knowledge of field archaeology, dowsing with rods can sometimes hit the jackpot. |
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After breakfast he strolls through deserted lanes before retiring to his drawing room to read about archaeology, Greek mythology, and biographies. |
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Human remains and burials have certainly been of major importance in the history of archaeology, but they are still only a small part of what archaeologists study. |
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As a research discipline, archaeology remains in vigorous good health. |
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The other main arena for scientific projects and expeditions in the UK is archaeology, and this comes under the general umbrella of the Nautical Archaeology Society. |
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The archaeological excavation is a necessary preliminary to that work, and pipe laying cannot take place until the archaeology has been completed. |
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The first time I ever heard about archaeology was in the fifth grade when we learned about Richard Leakey. |
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But it seems to be as if archaeology is, in some sense, about honoring the losers' story, too, right? |
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Among these challengers is Olga Palagia, professor of archaeology at the University of Athens. |
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Now that their new postgraduate archaeology course has been validated, Orkney College would like to hear from students interested in studying archaeology in Orkney. |
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It is hoped to have talks in the coming year on landscape and memory, woodlands, marine archaeology, and a lecture by a plantsman trained at Glasnevin. |
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This sort of junk archaeology is only slightly less ludicrous than alien intervention theories but crosses a more problematic line in its openly racialist intent. |
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With Reiner playing the straight man, Caesar plays a wise-cracking and loopy archaeology professor. |
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The movie performs a kind of archaeology of crime, unearthing the secrets that lie beneath secrets, and discovering finally the bottomlessness of every mystery. |
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Throughout his career since leaving Cambridge he pursued an interest in archaeology, at first studying barrows and burial sites and later hillforts. |
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One of the officer present, a Lieutenant Bouchard, who had trained in archaeology, identified the three bands of scripts as hieroglyphic, demotic, and ancient Greek. |
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A spokesman said there would be a programme of public archaeology on a site rich in historic remains. |
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With no proper time or resources for archaeology, the results were poor and largely unpublished. |
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This was taken up by archaeologists during the 1960s, but under the glare of the mature processual archaeology of the 1970s and 1980s appeared rather simplistic. |
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After the war he was appointed keeper of archaeology in the National Museum of Wales but in 1926 he left Wales to become Director of the London Museum. |
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Chris Barclay, keeper of archaeology and curator of the museum, joined Hull Council only a few weeks ago but has already been awed by the scale of the development. |
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In the 1990s the television archaeology programme Time Team excavated the foundations, in some of the local back gardens. |
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The building's developers have asked for some archaeology to be undertakem. |
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The archaeology will tell us which methods of burial were used by the Ancient Greeks. |
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Contradictory data from archaeology and genetics will most likely deliver future hypotheses that will, eventually, confirm each other. |
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Indeed, the industrial archaeology of Dartmoor is a subject in its own right. |
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This account can be related to the evidence of archaeology, notably the distribution of types of fibulae, or brooches, worn by the women. |
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From the point of view of human archaeology, it falls in the Paleolithic and Mesolithic periods. |
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Subsequent aerial archaeology suggests that this ditch runs from the west to the north of Stonehenge, near the avenue. |
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Richborough has a large natural harbour which would have been suitable, and archaeology shows Roman military occupation at about the right time. |
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Some navigational canals were recorded by ancient geographers and are still traceable by modern archaeology. |
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The rise of archaeology in the 20th century has shed light on the period, offering a more nuanced understanding of its achievements. |
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They base this notion on evidence provided by both archaeology and Welsh literary legend. |
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Sails for Viking ships required large amounts of wool, as evidenced by experimental archaeology. |
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Resources necessary for new courses in the arts, architecture and archaeology were donated by Richard Fitzwilliam of Trinity College. |
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Each camp discovered by archaeology has its own specific layout and architectural features, which makes sense from a military point of view. |
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The fictional heroine of BBC1 archaeology thriller Bonekickers was depicted as living in the Crescent. |
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In April 1956, Childe was awarded the Gold Medal of the Society of Antiquaries for his services to archaeology. |
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Whilst working at the Institute, Childe continued writing and publishing books dealing with archaeology and prehistory. |
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The end of the Pleistocene corresponds with the end of the last glacial period and also with the end of the Paleolithic age used in archaeology. |
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Seals were used in the earliest civilizations and are of considerable importance in archaeology and art history. |
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Work on field systems and environmental archaeology has also highlighted how much agricultural practice continued and changed over the period. |
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Williams did not fit in with the members of the association, whose primary interests were in Welsh architecture and archaeology. |
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Mortimer Wheeler was appointed keeper of archaeology in 1922, and in 1924 he became director of the museum. |
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This does not imply that the majority of the presidents were uninterested in archaeology. |
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In that year he was appointed curator of archaeology in the National Museum of Wales, and in 1926 became its Director. |
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In October 1967, he was admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he read anthropology, archaeology, and history. |
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In the field of archaeology, soil stratigraphy is used to better understand the processes that form and protect archaeological sites. |
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Paleontology is one of the historical sciences, along with archaeology, geology, astronomy, cosmology, philology and history itself. |
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The archaeology department includes the bequest of Arthur Evans and so has an excellent collection of Greek and Minoan pottery. |
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The museum has collections of archaeology, botany, fine and applied art, geology, and zoology. |
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Therefore, much of this history can only be found among the artifacts of archaeology. |
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In his role as a college professor of archaeology, Jones is scholarly and learned in a tweed suit, lecturing on ancient civilizations. |
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He is perhaps the most influential character in films that explore archaeology. |
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Since the release of Raiders of the Lost Ark in 1981, the very idea of archaeology and archaeologists has fundamentally shifted. |
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A 2007 survey conducted at Lycoming College set out to examine the public perception of archaeology and what an archaeologist looks like. |
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With the development of archaeology and the application of modern techniques, many previously lost cities have been rediscovered. |
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Many sea battles through history also provide a reliable source of shipwrecks for underwater archaeology. |
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There is no archaeological evidence of a Pictish link and in archaeology the Cruthin are indistinguishable from their neighbours in Ireland. |
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The Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery houses a collection encompassing natural history, archaeology, local glassware, Chinese ceramics and art. |
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Geomorphology is practiced within physical geography, geology, geodesy, engineering geology, archaeology and geotechnical engineering. |
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As such, landscape archaeology is often employed to study the human use of land over extensive periods of time. |
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Now, however, African archaeology has become extremely important in discovering the origins of humanity. |
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While traditionally described as evidence for the later Upper Paleolithic Model, European archaeology has shown that the issue is more complex. |
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In experimental archaeology, researchers attempt to create replica tools, to understand how they were made. |
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Study of the Stone Age has never been mainly about stone tools and archaeology, which are only one form of evidence. |
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Cranborne Chase, which straddles the border, has, like Salisbury Plain, yielded much Stone Age and Bronze Age archaeology. |
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It was raised in 1982 by the Mary Rose Trust, in one of the most complex and expensive projects in the history of maritime archaeology. |
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In geography, statistics and archaeology, a settlement, locality or populated place is a community in which people live. |
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In archaeology, a tool stone is a type of stone that is used to manufacture stone tools. |
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In contrast, archaeology and biological anthropology remained largely positivist. |
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It is based on a scientific approach, and brings together fields such as archaeology, behavioral ecology, psychology, primatology, and genetics. |
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In the archaeology of the Stone Age, an industry or technocomplex is a typological classification of stone tools. |
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It is not to be confused with industrial archaeology, which concentrates on industrial sites from more recent periods. |
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In archaeology, a prismatic blade is a long, narrow, specialized stone flake tool with a sharp edge, like a small razor blade. |
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A specialty within maritime archaeology is nautical archaeology, which studies vessel construction and use. |
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As with archaeology as a whole, maritime archaeology can be practised within the historical, industrial, or prehistoric periods. |
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Maritime archaeology studies prehistorical objects and sites that are, because of changes in climate and geology, now underwater. |
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In 1999 a team led by Robert Ballard and Harvard University archaeology Professor Lawrence Stager investigated the wrecks. |
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Studies now include as an element of underwater archaeology, as a whole, the study of submerged indigenous sites. |
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Interest in the archaeology of Nydam Bog has always been particularly lively in the local area. |
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In the history of archaeology Ramsauer's work at Hallstatt helped usher in a new, more systematic way of doing archaeology. |
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One of the major achievements of 19th century archaeology was the development of stratigraphy. |
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The application of stratigraphy to archaeology first took place with the excavations of prehistorical and Bronze Age sites. |
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The purpose of archaeology is to learn more about past societies and the development of the human race. |
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Without such written sources, the only way to understand prehistoric societies is through archaeology. |
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Often, archaeology provides the only means to learn of the existence and behaviors of people of the past. |
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However, these endeavours, real and fictional, are not representative of modern archaeology. |
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Since 1990 PPG 16 has required planners to consider archaeology as a material consideration in determining applications for new development. |
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Early archaeology was largely an attempt to uncover spectacular artifacts and features, or to explore vast and mysterious abandoned cities. |
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This generalization laid the foundation for the modern popular view of archaeology and archaeologists. |
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Another popular thought that dates back to this era is that archaeology is monetarily lucrative. |
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The majority of the public view archaeology as being something only available to a narrow demographic. |
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To generalize, the public views archaeology as a fantasized hobby more than a job in the scientific community. |
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The modern depiction of archaeology is sensationalized so much that it has incorrectly formed the public's perception of what archaeology is. |
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Television programs, web videos and social media can also bring an understanding of underwater archaeology to a broad audience. |
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In the UK, popular archaeology programs such as Time Team and Meet the Ancestors have resulted in a huge upsurge in public interest. |
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The Migration Theory has been called into question since 1980, based on genealogy, craniometry and archaeology. |
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There are a wide range of interpretations in the field of biblical archaeology. |
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However, written sources are vague about Norse rituals, and many are invisible to us now even with the assistance of archaeology. |
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Although it is difficult to reconstruct the belief system through archaeology, some indicators of ritual practice do leave physical traces. |
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Most of the Stroganovs are known to have shown interest for art, literature, history, and archaeology. |
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In archaeology, the term tradition is a set of cultures or industries which appear to develop on from one another over a period of time. |
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There is no conclusive proof from archaeology as to whether the specific events of the Mahabharata have any historical basis. |
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Melos and Lipari sources produced among the most widespread trading in the Mediterranean region as known to archaeology. |
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His study of Norse and Anglican archaeology made him widely recognised as a leading authority. |
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The main source for prehistory is archaeology, but some scholars are beginning to make more use of evidence from the natural and social sciences. |
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Many valleys have been dug over and scarred, leaving a rich industrial archaeology. |
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She will also touch on their use in archaeology such as scanning mummies and the x-raying of famous WORKs of art. |
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Archaeomagnetic intensity spike recorded in high resolution slag deposit from historical biblical archaeology site in southern Jordan. |
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I then discuss the function of artefactual memory and the archaeology of the contemporary past in the post-apocalyptic novel Wall of Days. |
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Just opened in May, this outstanding space offers eclectic natural history and archaeology displays, from ancient mummies to live animals. |
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Battlefield archaeology was pioneered in the USA in the 1980s to discover the truth about the Battle of Little Bighorn. |
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The middle valley of the Belize River is one of the loci classici of Mesoamerican archaeology. |
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I found the section of the book on forensic archaeology fascinating. |
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Consequently, newcomers to Mesoameri can archaeology will not find a handy crib with which to sequence and locate Toltecs, Olmecs or Mixtecs. |
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Seven contributions from specialists in Greek and Roman archaeology examine the question of colonization in the ancient world. |
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Schnapp mull over unconformities between archaeology and monument management present and past. |
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The Great Auk, or Garefowl Alca impennis, its history, archaeology and remains. |
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He may be regarded as a Hellenist, as he spent most of his life researching Classical philology and archaeology, especially ancient Greece. |
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Hellman began her art studies by reading archaeology as well as art history at the Helsinki University. |
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The archaeology, the epigraphy, the statistics and, now, the hard chemical evidence all tell the same story. |
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Two Festschrifts presenting papers in the area of Syrian archaeology to two prominent archaeologists in that field have recently appeared. |
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The industrial archaeology of Dartmoor covers a number of the industries which have, over the ages, taken place on Dartmoor, and the remaining evidence surrounding them. |
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Derby Museum and Art Gallery shows paintings by Joseph Wright, as well as fine Royal Crown Derby porcelain, natural history, local regiments and archaeology. |
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She draws on her field experiences in cultural anthropology, background in Classical philology and history, and training in epigraphy and archaeology. |
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All dates are approximate and conjectural, obtained through research in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, genetics, geology, or linguistics. |
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In archaeology, the Iron Age refers to the advent of ferrous metallurgy. |
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The term is especially common in the study of American archaeology. |
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Archaeologists have tentatively identified marketplaces at an increasing number of Maya cities by means of a combination of archaeology and soil analysis. |
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The final two decades of the 19th century saw the birth of modern scientific archaeology in the Maya region, with the meticulous work of Alfred Maudslay and Teoberto Maler. |
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Nearly four decades later, Burkitt still lived in a world of eoliths and coups-de-poing, in the innocent world of pre-World War I Stone Age archaeology. |
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The parallel phase of Irish archaeology is termed the Irish Iron Age. |
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Archaeologists seeking a neutral orientation that is neither biblical nor national have used terms such as Levantine archaeology and archaeology of the Southern Levant. |
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With the rise of modern archaeology in the early 20th Century, archeologists began to excavate and investigate bog bodies more carefully and thoroughly. |
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The public is often under the impression that all archaeology takes place in a distant and foreign land, only to collect monetarily or spiritually priceless artifacts. |
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However, such evidence from skeletal remains was brushed aside as a new movement developed in archaeology from the 1960s, which stressed cultural continuity. |
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Early archaeology was mostly done by upper class, scholarly men. |
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Historical archaeology is the study of cultures with some form of writing. |
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Survey was not widely practiced in the early days of archaeology. |
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Many people identify archaeology with the recovery of such aesthetic, religious, political, or economic treasures rather than with the reconstruction of past societies. |
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Archaeology became a professional activity in the first half of the 20th century, and it became possible to study archaeology as a subject in universities and even schools. |
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Tentative steps towards the systematization of archaeology as a science took place during the Enlightenment era in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries. |
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However, much of his account has not yet been corroborated by archaeology, whilst his narrative must in wide parts be considered as biased and, in some points, unlikely. |
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It is to his credit and to the enormous benefit of archaeology that he proceeded to excavate each one with the same slow, methodical care as the first. |
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The third tier consists of the archaeology of maritime cultures, in which nautical technology, naval warfare, trade and shipboard societies are studied. |
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However, as with terrestrial archaeology what survives to be investigated by modern archaeologists can often be a tiny fraction of the material originally deposited. |
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Human time on Earth is divided up into relevant cultural traditions based on material, such as the Paleolithic and the Neolithic, of particular use in archaeology. |
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Throughout the 1970s, the Mary Rose was meticulously surveyed, excavated and recorded with the latest methods within the field of maritime archaeology. |
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Another timber shows signs of having been fashioned as a type of conduit, which is not something that has ever been seen in Mesolithic archaeology before. |
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In terms of archaeology, language, lifestyle, and religion there was little to set the Phoenicians apart as markedly different from other residents of the Levant. |
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Mode 1 was now being shared by a number of Hominans over the same ranges, presumably subsisting in different niches, but the archaeology is not precise enough to say which. |
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Much of what he wrote about has been confirmed by archaeology. |
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Modern archaeology has largely discarded the historicity of this narrative, with it being reframed as constituting the Israelites' inspiring national myth narrative. |
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Submarines are also used in tourism, and for undersea archaeology. |
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Crawford was appointed Archaeology Officer and played a prominent role in developing the use of aerial photography to deepen understanding of archaeology. |
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Paleontology lies on the border between biology and geology, but differs from archaeology in that it excludes the study of anatomically modern humans. |
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Pliny the Elder provides a detailed description of gold mining in book xxxiii of his Naturalis Historia, most of which has been confirmed by archaeology. |
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Nonetheless it has now replaced cromlech as the usual English term in archaeology, when the more technical and descriptive alternatives are not used. |
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Clark Prizes are awarded every five years for the most distinguished published contributions to the study of the archaeology and history of Wales and The Marches. |
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Recent archaeology has shown that many of the forts on the Gask Ridge were rebuilt, sometimes twice, without evidence of destruction through warfare. |
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Childe himself believed that his primary contribution to archaeology was in his interpretative frameworks, an analysis supported by Alison Ravetz and Peter Gathercole. |
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European archaeology had rapidly expanded during the 1950s, leading to increasing specialisation and making the synthesising that Childe was known for increasingly difficult. |
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The book introduced the concept of an archaeological culture to Britain from Germany, revolutionising the theoretical approach of British archaeology. |
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At Queen's, Childe was entered for a diploma in classical archaeology followed by a Literae Humaniores degree, although he never completed the former. |
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In the subject rankings for 2017, Durham was ranked 3rd in the world for theology, divinity and religious studies, 4th for archaeology and 7th for geography. |
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He also wrote books about Irish archaeology and peasant folklore. |
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The British Iron Age is a conventional name in the archaeology of Great Britain, typically excluding prehistoric Ireland, which had an independent Iron Age culture of its own. |
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In the latter part of the second millennium, the finds of archaeology allowed a view of the settlement pattern to be inferred from changes in artefacts. |
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The large amount of travel was reused in novels such as The Murder on the Orient Express, as well as suggesting the idea of archaeology as an adventure itself. |
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But her fame as an author far surpassed his fame in archaeology. |
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Gascony and vicinity is an active area of Viking archaeology at present. |
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The wide variety of subjects covered by this volume indicates Harry Smith's breadth of interest, from field archaeology to the translation of demotic papyri. |
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They are to archaeology what uniformitarianism is to geology, a means to advance from hypotheses to results through the regulated assessment and incorporation of evidence. |
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The small rockshelter outside the town is one of the least impressive of ali Palaeolithic type-sites, but it nevertheless played a major role in the history of archaeology. |
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Her book is also the archaeology of today's patterns of collaboration among art production, art theory, theorized academic art history, and exhibition practice. |
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