The study investigates why the scientific construction of knowledge
about the prehistoric inhabitants of Lancastria has focused so much
on individual artefacts and single sites removed from their
landscape context. It asks why the knowledge and understanding
assembled by archaeologists has had so little to do with studies of
change over the long term. It examines some of the circumstances
that shaped these approaches over the past 400 years tracing the
parting of the ways between scientific and popular knowledge of the
past. Specific research objectives of the study are to
recontextualise the interrelationships between objects, monuments
and landscape to facilitate a diachronic study of change in later
prehistoric Lancastria; to explore the influence of local and
regional contexts on strategies of exploitation, interaction,
connectivity and interdependence amongst the prehistoric
inhabitants of the region; to explore the changing role of
technology and material culture in ordering and representing
changing social identity; and to develop a model for the social
reproduction of small-scale society through time within the region.
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