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Borderlands [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 224 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Dec-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Archaeological Unit
  • ISBN-10: 0954482476
  • ISBN-13: 9780954482473
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 35,21 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 224 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Dec-2008
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Archaeological Unit
  • ISBN-10: 0954482476
  • ISBN-13: 9780954482473
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Taking its inspiration from Cyril Fox's groundbreaking 1923 study of its namesake, and with its first volume issued to mark the 85th anniversary of his book, this series is dedicated to the archaeology of Cambridge's hinterland. In recent years an enormous amount of fieldwork has occured within the City's environs, to the point that it must now rank as one of the most intensively investigated landscapes in southern England.



This volume reports the 2002/03 Hutchinson Site excavations beside Addenbrooke's Hospital. While primarily concerned with its Iron Age/Roman Conquest-Period dynamics, there was also significant later Bronze Age and Middle Saxon occupation.



The site's sequence both informs, and is informed by, the results of an evaluation survey extending over 200ha west to the River Cam, which led to the recovery of some 15 new sites. Thereafter, three other landscape evaluation case-studies are presented, drawn both from the County's southern chalklands and also its western and northern clays. Seeing comparable site-discovery rates, this enormous increase in known site densities has fundamental implications for understandings of early land-use and settlement/population levels, and allows archaeologists to appreciate for the first time what is, in effect, the past fabric of the land . The case is made that such grand-scale surveys should be considered as 'stand-alone' programmes of investigation in their own right.

Recenzijas

The CAU has been carrying out some of the most original and informative fieldwork in recent years. Its reports are essential reading.' -- Professor Richard Bradley Professor Richard Bradley Borderlands is an important addition to an excellent developing series... Recognising an important historiographic aspect to fieldwork has enabled the authors to reinterpret the wider landscape of the area in an interesting and innovative way.' -- Dr Jeremy Taylor Dr Jeremy Taylor This well-conceived volume sets a standard and is a major contribution to the archaeology of the county.' -- Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society

Foreword New Archaeologies of the Cambridge Region viii
Acknowledgements x
Framing Contexts and the Study of Pattern
1(22)
Christopher Evans
Excavating New Addenbrooke's --- 1967 & 2007
3(4)
Histories and resonance
7(8)
Fieldwork context and landscape setting
15(5)
Perse School
17(1)
War Ditches
18(1)
Fulbourn Hospital
18(1)
Babraham Road Park-and-Ride
18(1)
Trumpington Road Park-and-Ride
19(1)
Inset: `War Ditches' --- defence and fieldwork
20(1)
Robin Standring
Text and structure
21(2)
The Hutchison Site, Addenbrooke's
23(118)
Christopher Evans
Duncan Mackay
Leo Webley
Public and display initiatives
27(1)
Phasing structure
27(1)
Prehistoric activity
28(12)
Middle Bronze Age (Phase 1)
28(1)
Late Bronze Age (Phase 2)
28(2)
Artefact studies
30(9)
Environmental and economic evidence
39(1)
Discussion
39(1)
Late Iron Age and Conquest Period settlement
40(49)
Late Iron Age (Phase 3)
40(2)
Mid-late first century AD (Phase 4)
42(2)
Late Iron Age and Conquest Period structures
44(3)
The `Pond-well'
47(1)
Burials
47(2)
Cremations
49(3)
Inhumations
52(5)
Pottery kilns
57(5)
Oven
62(1)
Pitting hollows
63(1)
Artefact studies
63(22)
Environmental and economic evidence
85(1)
Discussion
86(3)
Late first-mid second century AD (Phase 5)
89(3)
Pottery
91(1)
Small finds
91(1)
Environmental and economic evidence
92(1)
Discussion
92(1)
Middle Saxon (Phase 6)
92(8)
Buildings
92(3)
Wells
95(1)
Artefact studies
95(4)
Environmental and economic evidence
99(1)
Discussion
100(1)
Medieval/Post-medieval (Phase 7)
100(1)
Radiocarbon dating
101(1)
Inset: War Ditches --- squaring (and losing) the circle
102(4)
Environmental and economic studies
106(17)
Faunal remains
106(4)
Chris Swaysland
Environmental bulk samples
110(12)
Kate Roberts
Pollen analysis
122(1)
Steve Boreham
Concluding discussion
123(18)
Matters of economy and environment
126(1)
Potter farmers ? - Pottery production and supply
127(6)
Conquest Period dynamics
133(8)
Environs Fieldwork and Distributional Case-studies
141(46)
Christopher Evans
Environs surveys
141(25)
Alison Dickens
Recovery rates and site gazetteer
146(11)
A Conquest Period burial
157(9)
Inset: Rectory Farm, Great Shelford and enclosure morphology
166(5)
John Alexander
Tony Legge
Downlands and Claylands - three case-studies
171(16)
Patterning and landscape densities
181(6)
Concluding Discussion --- Scattered Evidence
187(14)
Christopher Evans
Hutchison revisited
187(6)
Distributions and the `engine of research'
193(1)
Inset: Last things
194(7)
References 201
Christopher Evans is executive Director of the Cambridge Archaeological unit based in the Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge. He has worked in British Archaeology at a senior level for more than twenty-five years, specialising in British prehistory, and archaeological theory with extensive experience in he management of complex excavation and post-excavation programmes. Leo Webley is Head of Post-Excavation at Oxford Archaeology South. He holds a PhD from the University of Cambridge and has published widely on the European Bronze and Iron Ages. He is currently a council member for the Prehistoric Society.