Shells
Cheryl Claassen offers an authoritative, readable and clear guide to the study of shells, which is addressed to students and professional archaeologists and palaeontologists. She considers the history of archaeological interest in shells, the biology of freshwater and marine molluscs, and critically discusses current techniques, methods, and research problems. Drawing on examples worldwide, and covering prehistoric and historic periods, among the topics covered are: is shell deposit natural or cultural? How long do shells last? What can shells tell us about the environmental characteristics and ancient habitats or about the people who collected them? What symbolic roles have shells served in human societies? This is a well balanced account, and all aspects of the subject are clearly represented.
- Offers the only substantial treatment of shell taphonomy for archaeologists
- Good worldwide coverage and wide ranging references
- Well balanced, and all aspects of the subject are clearly represented
Reviews & endorsements
"...both Claassen and Cambridge Press are to be commended to their devotion to providing the archaeological community with such a useful volume." Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology
Product details
November 1998Paperback
9780521578523
284 pages
251 × 180 × 22 mm
0.72kg
9 b/w illus. 21 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. The archaeology of shell matrix sites
- 2. Shelled animals: biology and predation
- 3. Diagenesis and taphonomy
- 4. Quantification of archaeological shells
- 5. Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction
- 6. Season of death techniques
- 7. Dietary reconstruction
- 8. The shell artifact
- 9. Shells and social organization.