Economic Prehistory
Papers on Archaeology
£46.99
- Author: Grahame Clark
- Date Published: April 2009
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521108515
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Throughout his career Grahame Clark has pioneered on a world scale the use of the archaeological record to document the economic and social life of prehistoric communities. In Europe he was the first to employ the concept of the ecosystem in archaeology and to underscore the necessarily reciprocal relationship that exists between culture and environment. In Britain he has played a major role in moving archaeology away from its preoccupation with typology and spurring on the newly emergent discipline of bioarchaeology. Economic Prehistory reflects all these concerns. Following a comprehensive bibliography of Professor Clark's writing, the volume opens with a series of classic papers on basic subsistence activities such as seal hunting, whaling, fowling, fishing, forest clearance, farming and stock raising. Subsequent sections then deal with world prehistory and the thorny relationship between archaeology, education and society. The volume closes with a retrospective which looks critically at such figures of the past as Gordon Childe and Mortimer Wheeler and to the author's own renowned excavations at the Mesolithic site of Starr Carr.
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×Product details
- Date Published: April 2009
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521108515
- length: 660 pages
- dimensions: 244 x 170 x 35 mm
- weight: 1.03kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Preface
Part I. Economic Prehistory
Part II. World Prehistory
Part III. Archaeology and Society
Part IV. Retrospective
Index.
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