We a good story
Quick delivery in the UK

Books in the Symposia of the Association for Environmental Archaeology series

Filter
Filter
Sort bySort Series order
  • - Economies, environments and subsistence in lands bordering the North Atlantic
    by Rupert A. Housley
    £59.49

    Maritime communications have played a vital role in shaping both human cultures and the biogeography of the North Atlantic Realm, a region containing discrete groups of islands separated by deep water.

  • by G. Bailey
    £34.99

    The papers in this book were first presented at the Association for Environmental Archaeology conference at Newcastle upon Tyne in 1998.

  • by Jacqueline Huntley
    £34.99

    Papers from the 1993 Association for Environmental Archaeology conference at Durham. The themes of the conference were taphonomy and interpretation, to encourage spreakers to go beyond data acquisition and description. This volume looks at how material (pollen, insects, bones etc.

  • - Papers in honour of Susan Limbrey
    by Wendy Smith, Megan Brickley & David N. Smith
    £34.99

    The fourteen papers in this volume focus on the environmental archaeology of Britain, uncovering a rich seam of evidence from what might, to the uninitiated, seem like the most unlikely places. They are centred on issues looked at by Susan Limbrey during her career, and presented in her honour on the occasion of her retirement.

  • - Human Settlement and Marginality
    by Coralie Mills
    £33.49

    Throughout history some areas have been less attractive for living and farming than others. These areas are identified as marginal because of environmental, economic or socio-political factors. How can we recognise marginality in the archaeological record? How particularly can environmental remains be interpreted? And how can we interpret human strategies when faced with a marginal environment? Most of the papers in this volume focus on Scottish contexts, reflecting their origins at the 1992 meeting of the Association for Environmental Archaeology in Edinburgh. However Greek pastoralism and the problems of food supply in the Egyptian and Syrian deserts are also examined.

Join thousands of book lovers

Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.