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Man 14
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Man 14
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Man
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
14
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
1979
Note
Extra information on the publication or report.
Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1979
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (British Archaeological Abstracts (BAA))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
05 Dec 2008
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
British prehistory: an integrated view
Richard Bradley
Ian Hodder
93 - 104
Economic and cultural evidence is integrated into a comprehensive account of change in British prehistory. Three major phases are identified in which the structures of the economic and cultural evidence differ: (1) early-middle Neo, a stable arable economy in which expanding lineage groups could emphasize their common rights; the build up of strains led to (2), later Neo-EBA in which emphasis shifted from lineage to widespread links between smaller and less stable settlement units; (3) MBA-LBA-EIA, a radically different social and cultural system based on stable intensive agriculture. Regional groups (?'tribes') emerge with a common and competitive interest in maintaining and symbolizing their rights to tracts of land. Au(abr)
Court cairns, passage graves and social change in Ireland
Timothy C Darvill
311 - 327
The recent development of new techniques of spatial analysis aids the understanding of social and ritual organization in prehistoric societies, in this case Irish megalithic 'tombs'. The court cairns can be shown to have been succeeded by the passage graves and to have different spatial distributions, and it is suggested that a segmentary society changed into a chiefdom society in the middle to late Neolithic. It can be further shown that within the ritual sub-system of the society there would seem to have been a more pronounced hierarchial structure. Au(adp)
The location of pottery manufacture
Keith Nicklin
436 - 458
Using a wide range of ethnographic evidence, re-assesses the factors which influence the location of pre-industrial pottery manufacture. In the past, undue emphasis has been placed on the natural distribution of raw materials, whereas this study indicates only a tenuous connection between location of materials and site of manufacture; cultural and economic factors are often more important. Aspects discussed are: clay resources and location of manufacture; methods of obtaining clay; fuel; other raw materials; cultural and economic factors in location.
Flint implements of Moustier type and associated mammalia remains from the Crayford brick-earths, by R. B. Higgins, with a note by R. A. Smith
Excavation of a barrow called La Hougue de Vinde, situated at Noirmont, Jersey
R R Marett
G F B De Gruchy
Standing stones and stone circles inYorkshire
A L Lewis
The striation of flint surfaces
James R Moir