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ref:
2004/1 article 1
Taphonomy
and stratigraphy in European prehistory
Paola Villa
University of Colorado Museum, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0265
villap@buffmail.colorado.edu
Keywords:
Paleolithic sites, western Europe, refitting, living
structures, small assemblages, hunting and scavenging.
Abstract
This paper reports on past and recent studies of archaeological
stratigraphy and human occupation features at several
Paleolithic cave and open air occurrences seen in the
light of refitting, taphonomy and sedimentary context.
The Lazaret, Lunel Viel, Fontbrégoua, Caminade,
Ambrona and Grotta dei Moscerini occurrences are examined
in detail. The adequacy and significance of samples
and the value of the refitting method are discussed
for some cases. The most successful interpretations
of site function, behavioural patterns or models of
cultural stratigraphy are those that integrate bone
taphonomy or lithic analyses, whether or not based on
refitting, with sedimentary and contextual analyses.
Some occurrences show that taphonomy without contextual
or stratigraphic controls is not likely to produce solid
data and that honesty in inference requires that our
interpretations do not imply more than we actually know.



ref:
2004/1 article 2
Spaces
and species: archaeology, landscape
ecology and spatial models in northern Patagonia
V
Scheinsohn
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas
y Tecnológicas (CONICET), Instituto Nacional
de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano,
Buenos Aires, Argentina
scheinso@mail.retina.ar
SD
Matteucci
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas
y Tecnológicas CONICET, Grupo de Ecología
del Paisaje y Medio Ambiente, Facultad de Arquitectura,
Diseño y Urbanismo, Universidad de Buenos Aires,
Argentina
smatt@gepama.com.ar
Keywords:
Landscape ecology, spatial modelling, landscape archaeology,
Argentine, Patagonia.
Abstract
In the context of a project framed on ecological landscape
archaeology, a predictive model of site location is
constructed from broad patterns of hunter-gatherer ecology
(Binford 2001) applied to the specific environmental
characteristics of a sub-antarctic steppe-forest ecotone.
Geographic Information System (GIS) technology and image
processing are used to model the location of archaeological
sites in Comarca Andina del Paralelo 42º (parallel
42° Andean region), northern Patagonia, Argentina.
The model is tested against the spatial distribution
of known archaeological sites, and shown to be a good
predictor of site location. The methodology has wider
application as a means of minimising the cost of intensive
field surveys in areas with poor archaeological visibility.


ref:
2004/1 article 3
The
Mesolithic in Scotland: action
archaeology for the twenty-first century
CR Wickham-Jones
Kirkwall, Orkney, Scotland
c.wickham-jones@mesolithic.co.uk
Keywords:
Mesolithic, Scotland, survey, lithics, settlement.
Abstract
This paper presents an overview of existing information
on the Mesolithic in Scotland with two aims: to inform
others; and to generate discussion and comparison in
order to aid our own interpretations in the light of
work elsewhere. The main developments in Mesolithic
archaeology in Scotland in the mid twentieth century
are presented together with the changes in the situation
as we enter the early twenty-first century. From a cultural
setting that was generally regarded as poorly developed,
and even late in many places, to the general recognition
today of a well developed and varied archaeological
record that indicates increasingly early settlement
at the start of the Holocene, Mesolithic archaeologists
in Scotland are now able to make use of many new techniques
and have an increasingly rich database at their disposal.
What do these developments mean? Where might the Mesolithic
of Scotland be going? And how can we learn from our
colleagues elsewhere?


ref:
2004/1 article 4
E-scapes
and E-motion: other ways of writing
the Mesolithic
Nyree Finlay
Department of Archaeology, University of Glasgow
The Gregory Building, Lilybank Gardens, Glasgow G12
8QQ, Scotland
n.finlay@archaeology.gla.ac.uk
Keywords:
Mesolithic, Scotland, environment, narratives, interpretation.
Abstract
This paper aims to review and address some recent trends
in writing about the Mesolithic and consider fruitful
approaches for understanding the gatherer-hunter-fisher
experience of 'scapes' (landscape, seascape, taskscape).
Attention is focused on the narratives that result from
our encounters with the archaeological record and a
series of examples, drawn from Scotland and the rest
of Britain, are presented that reflect on the treatment
of various categories of archaeological evidence. Of
central concern is how some recent trends in understanding
mobility, identity and experience in anthropology inform
Mesolithic archaeology. The focus of attention also
lies with the conceptual spaces that we as archaeologists
create to understand past environments and the places
and routines of gatherer-hunter lifeways. A dominant
theme is that of materiality and how material culture
can be used to evince a deeper understanding of place
and scape. Achieving this necessitates re-animating
the material we work with and revisiting many of the
traditional and often entrenched perspectives that we
bring to site and artefact interpretation.
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©
Western Academic & Specialist Press Ltd 2004
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