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Prehistoric Britain

Joshua Pollard (Editor)
ISBN: 978-1-4051-2545-1
Hardcover
384 pages
June 2008, Wiley-Blackwell
US $121.95 Add to Cart

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Prehistoric Britain (1405125454) cover image
This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 5-6 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.
Other Available Formats: Paperback

1. The Construction of Prehistoric Britain: Joshua Pollard (Bristol University).

2. Directions and Debates in the Archaeology of Palaeolithic Britain: Paul Pettitt (University of Sheffield).

3. The Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition in Britain: Julian Thomas (University of Manchester).

4. Foodways and Social Ecologies from the Early Mesolithic to the Early Bronze Age: Rick Schulting (Queen's University, Belfast).

5. Interpreting Landscape in the Mesolithic and Neolithic: Lesley McFadyen (University of Cambridge).

6. The Architecture of Monuments: Vicki Cummings (University of Central Lancaster).

7. Lithic Technology and the chaine operatoire: Chantal Conneller (University of Manchester).

8. How the Dead Live: Mortuary Practices, Memory and the Ancestors in Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Britain and Ireland: Andrew Jones (University of Southhampton).

9. The Development of an Agricultural Countryside: David Field (English Heritage).

10. Foodways and Social Ecologies from the Middle Bronze Age to Late Iron Age: Jacqui Mulville (Cardiff University).

11. The Architecture of Routine Life: Jo Bruck (University College Dublin).

12. Later Prehistoric Landscapes and Inhabitation: Robert Johnston (University of Sheffield).

13. Ceramic Technologies and Social Relations: Ann Woodward (University of Birmingham).

14. Exchange, Object Biographies and the Shaping of Identities, 10,000-1,000BC: Stuart Needham (The British Museum).

15. Interpretative Approaches to Identity, Community and the Person in Later Prehistory: Melanie Giles (University of Manchester).

16. Mortuary Rites, Memory and the Body in Later Prehistory: Andrew Fitzpatrick (Wessex Archaeology)