Books > History > World history > BCE to 500 CE
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Early Farmers - The View from Archaeology and Science (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,178
Discovery Miles 31 780
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Early Farmers - The View from Archaeology and Science (Hardcover)
Series: Proceedings of the British Academy, Vol. 198
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The Neolithic period was one of the great transformations in human
history with profound, long-term consequences. In Europe, there
were no farmers at 7000 cal BC, but very few hunter-gatherers after
about 4000 cal BC. Although we understand the broad chronological
structure of this shift, many pressing research questions remain.
Archaeologists are still vigorously debating the identity of those
principally involved in initiating change, the detail of everyday
lives during the Neolithic, including basic questions about
settlement, the operation of the farming economy and the varied
roles of material culture, and the character of large-scale and
long-term transformations. They face the task not only of working
at different scales, but of integrating ever-expanding amounts of
evidence. As well as the data coming from larger and more intensive
excavations, there has been a radical increase in the information
released by many kinds of scientific analysis of archaeological
remains. These now include, alongside longer established methods of
looking at food remains and material, the isotopic analysis of the
diet and lifetime movement of people, isotopic analysis of cereal
remains for indications of manuring, a DNA analysis of genetic
signatures, detailed micromorphological analysis of deposits where
people lived, and the close examination of the origin and
production of varying materials and artefacts. The 21 chapters by
leading experts in the field demonstrate how the combination of
archaeological and scientific evidence now provides opportunities
for new and creative understandings of Europe's early farmers. They
make an important contribution to the debate over how best to
integrate these multiple lines of evidence, scientific and more
traditionally archaeological, while keeping in central focus the
principal questions that we want to ask of our data.
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