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New Agendas in Remote Sensing and Landscape Archaeology in the Near
East is a collection of papers produced in honour of Tony James
Wilkinson, who was Professor of Archaeology at Durham University
from 2006 until his death in 2014. Though commemorative in concept,
the volume is an assemblage of new research representing emerging
agendas and innovative methods in remote sensing. The intention is
to explore the opportunities and challenges faced by researchers in
the field today, and the tools, techniques, and theoretical
approaches available to resolve them within the framework of
landscape archaeology. The papers build on the traditional
strengths of landscape archaeology, such as geoarchaeology and
settlement pattern analysis, as well as integrating data sources to
address major research questions, such as the ancient economy,
urbanism, water management and the treatment of the dead. The
authors demonstrate the importance of an interdisciplinary approach
for understanding the impact of human activity on shaping the
landscape and the effect that landscape has on sociocultural
development.
Originally coined to signify a style of pottery in southern Iraq,
and by extension an associated people and a chronological period,
the term "Ubaid" is now often used loosely to denote a vast Near
Eastern interaction zone, characterized by similarities in material
culture, particularly ceramic styles, which existed during the
sixth and fifth millennia B.C. This zone extended over 2,000 km
from the shores of the Mediterranean to the Straits of Hormuz,
including parts of Anatolia and perhaps even the Caucasus. The
volume contains twenty-three papers that explore what the "Ubaid"
is, how it is identified, and how the Ubaid in one location
compares to another in a distant location. The papers are the
result of "The Ubaid Expansion? Cultural Meaning, Identity and the
Lead-up to Urbanism," an International Workshop held at Grey
College, University of Durham, 20-22 April 2006.
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