Working with the past : : towards an archaeology of recycling / / edited by Dragoş Gheorghiu and Phil Mason.

This book invites archaeologists to approach the significant process of recycling within the archaeological record at two different levels: of artefacts and of landscape.

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Place / Publishing House:Oxford : : Archaeopress Publishing Ltd,, [2017]
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spelling Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling / edited by Dragoş Gheorghiu and Phil Mason.
1st ed.
Oxford : Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, [2017]
©2017
1 online resource (viii, 135 pages) : illustrations.
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Archaeopress archaeology
Description based on print version record.
This book invites archaeologists to approach the significant process of recycling within the archaeological record at two different levels: of artefacts and of landscape.
Cover -- Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- List of Figures and Plates -- Contributors -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Cycling and Recycling Seen through a Critical Assessment of the Taphonomic Process -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Prehistoric Artefacts as Sustainable Materials -- Lolita Nikolova -- Recycling Power and Place: -- The Many Lives of Traprain Law, SE Scotland -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Experimenting the Chalcolithic Ritual Technologies of Construction and Deconstruction -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Copper and Bronzes: -- The Birth of Complete Recycling in The Bronze Age -- Davide Delfino -- Rock Art Recycled? -- On the Use of Bronze Age Rock Art Sites during the Iron Age in Southern Scandinavia -- Per Nilsson -- Recycled Memories: -- The Past and Present in Early Iron Age Landscapes of Southern Germany -- Matthew L. Murray -- Ancestral Places: -- The Creation and Recycling of Monumental Landscapes in South-Eastern Slovenia in The 1st Millennium BC and the 1st Millennium AD -- Phil Mason -- Recycling Pots, Places and Practices: -- The Roman Cemetery at Podlipoglav -- Bernarda Županek and Irena Sivec -- Secondary use of storage vessels and household pottery during the late middle Ages: -- pottery in vaults as a case study -- Marta Caroscio -- The Reuse of Materials During the Medieval and Post-Medieval Periods: -- A Case Study of Recycling Building Materials in Rothwell, near Leeds, England -- George Nash -- Plate 1: Item of war turned into a child's toy. An example of use and reuse from a Bedouin camp in Jordan. Image R.R. Dods 1990. -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Fig 1: Karl Popper's Three Worlds of Knowledge. (http://www.knowledgejump.com/knowledge/popper.html).
Fig 2: Flow model for archaeological materials adapted and expanded from Schiffer (1972: 158-159), Lange and Rydberg (1972), and Clarke (1968: 36). Note the material remains of subject culture (1) in systemic contexts of GROUP 2 and GROUP 3 (the archaeolo -- Fig. 3: Model of the linkages/relationships of taphonomies I through IV. The main feature is diminishment of information. Three dimensions of space (in the diagram represented by the cube) and the dimension of time (represented by the movement into the vi -- Chart 1: CONTEXTS AND THEIR MEANING FOR FIGS 2 and 3 -- Plate 2: Recycling discarded items witin a culture (potential Group 1 returned to Group 1). (Hudson 2009) -- Plate 3: Dumpster diving. Recycling of food from discard area. Julia Golomb (left) and Alison Abreu-Garcia, both of Somerville, mine a dumpster of a metro-area grocery store. (Baker 2009 with Globe photo by Gretchen Ertl) -- Plate 4: Mahalapye, Botswana traditional house with walled 'front yard'. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mahalapye_traditional_house_ cropped.jpg accessed 22.01.2017) -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Lolita Nikolova -- Scheme 1: Societal components related to sustainability: production (1), repairing (2), secondary use (3), recycling (4) and wasting (5). -- Scheme 2: Prehistoric fragmented pottery as a sustainable material: non-building (A), foundation of paths (B), and building material (C). -- Scheme 3: Explanatory models of obtaining of earlier prehistoric fragmented pottery for use in later levels: by digging pits in the village (A), digging ditches in or around the village (B), obtaining soil from the periphery of the village (C), rituals (D -- Scheme 4: Modelling of possible reasons for finding fragmented pottery in prehistoric levels -- Recycling Power and Place: -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter.
Fig. 1: Location map (drawn by Rachael Kershaw) -- Fig. 2: Traprain Law, East Lothian (photo: Ian Armit) -- Fig. 3: Simplified plan of Traprain Law showing the main focal areas of excavation (drawn by Libby Mulqueeny) -- Fig. 4: AMS dates from Traprain Law, funded by Historic Scotland, calibrated using Oxcal 4 (Bronk Ramsey 2009, Reimer et al. 2004) -- Fig. 5: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 6: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 7: Stone 'plaque' made from fragment of the linear rock art (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 8: North Berwick Law framed in the out-turned entrance-way to the innermost enclosure at Traprain Law (photo: Ian Armit) -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Fig. 1: The experimental reconstruction by the author of the first level of dwelling in a Chalcolithic settlement (Vădastra 2003). -- Fig. 2: Uzunu tell used as a clay quarry by villagers (2007). -- Fig. 3: Fishermen houses at the base of Hârşova tell (2005). -- Fig. 4: The building of a wattle and daub house (2003). -- Fig. 5: Fragment of a burned wall with visible vegetal straws. (Sultana tell). -- Fig. 6: A foundation trench (Vădastra experiments 2003). -- Fig. 7: The ceramic wall of a burned house (Vădastra 2006). -- Fig. 8: Unburned part of a structural post (Vădastra 2010). -- Fig. 10: An unburned wattle and daub house left eight years to weathering with a recyclable wooden structure (Vădastra 2011). -- Fig. 9: The burned down house three years after the collapse (Vădastra 2009). -- Fig. 11: A mass of large burned architectural fragments (Uzunu tell, 2007) -- Fig. 12: Several layers of burned dwellings separated by levelling layers (Hârşova tell, 2005) -- Copper and Bronzes: -- Davide Delfino.
Fig. 1: Investigated areas -- Alpine region (A) and Atlantic Iberian Peninsula (B) -- Fig. 2: Alpine region: the copper resources (black circles) and cited sites (1. Baragalla -- 2. Casse Rousse -- 3. Pinerolo -- 4. Bric della Sorte -- 5. St. Pierre d' Albigny -- 6. Meytet -- 7.Lugana Vecchia -- 8. Castellarano -- 9. Frattesina di Fratta Polesine -- 10. S. -- Fig. 3: Bric della Sorte closet (Savona-Liguria) (Image of Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici della Liguria). -- Fig. 4: Atlantic Iberian Peninsula: the copper (circles) and tin (triangles) resources and citied sites (1. Quinta do Ervedal -- 2. Casal dos Fieis de Deus -- 3. Vila Cobva de Perrinho -- 4. Ria Huelva -- 5. Castro de Nossa Senhora de Guia -- 6. Castelejo -- 7/8. Ale -- Fig. 5: Porto do Concelho closet (Mação- Pinhal Interior). -- Fig. 6: Lugana Vecchia scraps in settlement (Brescia- Lombardia) (Elaborate from De Marinis 2006a: 1298,1300). -- Fig. 7: Frattesina di Fratta Polesine scraps in metallurgical workshop No. 4 (Padova-Veneto). -- Rock Art Recycled? -- Per Nilsson -- Fig. 1. Map showing the location of the Himmelstalund region. -- Fig. 2: Map showing the rock art site at Himmelstalund with the location of the hearths and the settlement remains. -- Fig. 3: A house from the Early Iron Age was found between the rock art site and the nearby river Motala Ström. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 4: Two hearths were found beneath one of the panels at Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 5: Rock art covered with fire cracked stones at Leonardsberg. From Nordén 1925. -- Fig. 6: The cemetery at Fiskeby. Map by Per Lundström, copy from the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities. -- Fig. 7: At Lille Strandbygård on the Danish island of Bornholm, two houses were found beside the rock art. From Sørensen 2006: 72.
Fig. 8: The runic inscription from Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Recycled Memories: -- Matthew L. Murray -- Fig. 1: Location of Tumulus 17 (excavated in 1999-2000 as part of the Landscape of Ancestors project) in the Speckhau (Hohmichele) mound group near the Heuneburg. The map shows mounds and mound groups that are traditionally considered part of the Heunebur -- Fig. 2: Plan view of Tumulus 17 showing the remains of the primary cremation grave (Gr. 5) in the central enclosure and the location and orientation of secondary graves. -- Fig. 3: Photograph of the south and east profiles of the northwest quarter of Tumulus 17 in 1999 showing mound stratigraphy. The distinction between the original (inner) mound and the later (outer) mound layers can be clearly seen (author's photograph). -- Fig. 4: Idealized profile of Tumulus 17 showing original (inner) and later (outer) mound fill and the location of refit pottery fragments (pottery refit data from Schneider 2003: Figure 56). -- Fig. 5: Plan of the structured landscape of the Heuneburg, including the hillfort and additional earthworks, as well as the "chamber" gate and its orientation toward the burial mounds at Gießübel-Talhau. Ditches are shown in grey and wall remnants are sho -- Fig. 6: Plan of the structured landscape of the Glauberg showing the hillfort and a complex of earthworks, including the remains of Tumulus 1 at the northern end of a ditched passageway. The earthworks were interrupted to incorporate older mounds and urn -- Ancestral Places: -- Phil Mason -- Fig. 1: Dolenjska and Bela kraijina in the 1st millennium BC, showing major settlements (After Dular 1993: 103, fig. 1 -- with additions from Dular 1985: 31, fig. 12 -- ANSl 1975 -- Dular and Tecco Hvala 2007 -- drawn by Ildikó Pintér). 1- Vače -- 2- Molnik -- 3- Mag.
Fig. 2: Plan of the late prehistoric settlement complex at Vinji vrh (Source: Agencija RS za okolje.
Salvage (Waste, etc.)
Gheorghiu, Dragos, editor.
Mason, Phil, 1958- editor.
1-78491-629-3
Archaeopress archaeology.
language English
format eBook
author2 Gheorghiu, Dragos,
Mason, Phil, 1958-
author_facet Gheorghiu, Dragos,
Mason, Phil, 1958-
author2_variant d g dg
p m pm
author2_role TeilnehmendeR
TeilnehmendeR
title Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling /
spellingShingle Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling /
Archaeopress archaeology
Cover -- Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- List of Figures and Plates -- Contributors -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Cycling and Recycling Seen through a Critical Assessment of the Taphonomic Process -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Prehistoric Artefacts as Sustainable Materials -- Lolita Nikolova -- Recycling Power and Place: -- The Many Lives of Traprain Law, SE Scotland -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Experimenting the Chalcolithic Ritual Technologies of Construction and Deconstruction -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Copper and Bronzes: -- The Birth of Complete Recycling in The Bronze Age -- Davide Delfino -- Rock Art Recycled? -- On the Use of Bronze Age Rock Art Sites during the Iron Age in Southern Scandinavia -- Per Nilsson -- Recycled Memories: -- The Past and Present in Early Iron Age Landscapes of Southern Germany -- Matthew L. Murray -- Ancestral Places: -- The Creation and Recycling of Monumental Landscapes in South-Eastern Slovenia in The 1st Millennium BC and the 1st Millennium AD -- Phil Mason -- Recycling Pots, Places and Practices: -- The Roman Cemetery at Podlipoglav -- Bernarda Županek and Irena Sivec -- Secondary use of storage vessels and household pottery during the late middle Ages: -- pottery in vaults as a case study -- Marta Caroscio -- The Reuse of Materials During the Medieval and Post-Medieval Periods: -- A Case Study of Recycling Building Materials in Rothwell, near Leeds, England -- George Nash -- Plate 1: Item of war turned into a child's toy. An example of use and reuse from a Bedouin camp in Jordan. Image R.R. Dods 1990. -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Fig 1: Karl Popper's Three Worlds of Knowledge. (http://www.knowledgejump.com/knowledge/popper.html).
Fig 2: Flow model for archaeological materials adapted and expanded from Schiffer (1972: 158-159), Lange and Rydberg (1972), and Clarke (1968: 36). Note the material remains of subject culture (1) in systemic contexts of GROUP 2 and GROUP 3 (the archaeolo -- Fig. 3: Model of the linkages/relationships of taphonomies I through IV. The main feature is diminishment of information. Three dimensions of space (in the diagram represented by the cube) and the dimension of time (represented by the movement into the vi -- Chart 1: CONTEXTS AND THEIR MEANING FOR FIGS 2 and 3 -- Plate 2: Recycling discarded items witin a culture (potential Group 1 returned to Group 1). (Hudson 2009) -- Plate 3: Dumpster diving. Recycling of food from discard area. Julia Golomb (left) and Alison Abreu-Garcia, both of Somerville, mine a dumpster of a metro-area grocery store. (Baker 2009 with Globe photo by Gretchen Ertl) -- Plate 4: Mahalapye, Botswana traditional house with walled 'front yard'. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mahalapye_traditional_house_ cropped.jpg accessed 22.01.2017) -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Lolita Nikolova -- Scheme 1: Societal components related to sustainability: production (1), repairing (2), secondary use (3), recycling (4) and wasting (5). -- Scheme 2: Prehistoric fragmented pottery as a sustainable material: non-building (A), foundation of paths (B), and building material (C). -- Scheme 3: Explanatory models of obtaining of earlier prehistoric fragmented pottery for use in later levels: by digging pits in the village (A), digging ditches in or around the village (B), obtaining soil from the periphery of the village (C), rituals (D -- Scheme 4: Modelling of possible reasons for finding fragmented pottery in prehistoric levels -- Recycling Power and Place: -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter.
Fig. 1: Location map (drawn by Rachael Kershaw) -- Fig. 2: Traprain Law, East Lothian (photo: Ian Armit) -- Fig. 3: Simplified plan of Traprain Law showing the main focal areas of excavation (drawn by Libby Mulqueeny) -- Fig. 4: AMS dates from Traprain Law, funded by Historic Scotland, calibrated using Oxcal 4 (Bronk Ramsey 2009, Reimer et al. 2004) -- Fig. 5: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 6: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 7: Stone 'plaque' made from fragment of the linear rock art (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 8: North Berwick Law framed in the out-turned entrance-way to the innermost enclosure at Traprain Law (photo: Ian Armit) -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Fig. 1: The experimental reconstruction by the author of the first level of dwelling in a Chalcolithic settlement (Vădastra 2003). -- Fig. 2: Uzunu tell used as a clay quarry by villagers (2007). -- Fig. 3: Fishermen houses at the base of Hârşova tell (2005). -- Fig. 4: The building of a wattle and daub house (2003). -- Fig. 5: Fragment of a burned wall with visible vegetal straws. (Sultana tell). -- Fig. 6: A foundation trench (Vădastra experiments 2003). -- Fig. 7: The ceramic wall of a burned house (Vădastra 2006). -- Fig. 8: Unburned part of a structural post (Vădastra 2010). -- Fig. 10: An unburned wattle and daub house left eight years to weathering with a recyclable wooden structure (Vădastra 2011). -- Fig. 9: The burned down house three years after the collapse (Vădastra 2009). -- Fig. 11: A mass of large burned architectural fragments (Uzunu tell, 2007) -- Fig. 12: Several layers of burned dwellings separated by levelling layers (Hârşova tell, 2005) -- Copper and Bronzes: -- Davide Delfino.
Fig. 1: Investigated areas -- Alpine region (A) and Atlantic Iberian Peninsula (B) -- Fig. 2: Alpine region: the copper resources (black circles) and cited sites (1. Baragalla -- 2. Casse Rousse -- 3. Pinerolo -- 4. Bric della Sorte -- 5. St. Pierre d' Albigny -- 6. Meytet -- 7.Lugana Vecchia -- 8. Castellarano -- 9. Frattesina di Fratta Polesine -- 10. S. -- Fig. 3: Bric della Sorte closet (Savona-Liguria) (Image of Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici della Liguria). -- Fig. 4: Atlantic Iberian Peninsula: the copper (circles) and tin (triangles) resources and citied sites (1. Quinta do Ervedal -- 2. Casal dos Fieis de Deus -- 3. Vila Cobva de Perrinho -- 4. Ria Huelva -- 5. Castro de Nossa Senhora de Guia -- 6. Castelejo -- 7/8. Ale -- Fig. 5: Porto do Concelho closet (Mação- Pinhal Interior). -- Fig. 6: Lugana Vecchia scraps in settlement (Brescia- Lombardia) (Elaborate from De Marinis 2006a: 1298,1300). -- Fig. 7: Frattesina di Fratta Polesine scraps in metallurgical workshop No. 4 (Padova-Veneto). -- Rock Art Recycled? -- Per Nilsson -- Fig. 1. Map showing the location of the Himmelstalund region. -- Fig. 2: Map showing the rock art site at Himmelstalund with the location of the hearths and the settlement remains. -- Fig. 3: A house from the Early Iron Age was found between the rock art site and the nearby river Motala Ström. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 4: Two hearths were found beneath one of the panels at Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 5: Rock art covered with fire cracked stones at Leonardsberg. From Nordén 1925. -- Fig. 6: The cemetery at Fiskeby. Map by Per Lundström, copy from the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities. -- Fig. 7: At Lille Strandbygård on the Danish island of Bornholm, two houses were found beside the rock art. From Sørensen 2006: 72.
Fig. 8: The runic inscription from Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Recycled Memories: -- Matthew L. Murray -- Fig. 1: Location of Tumulus 17 (excavated in 1999-2000 as part of the Landscape of Ancestors project) in the Speckhau (Hohmichele) mound group near the Heuneburg. The map shows mounds and mound groups that are traditionally considered part of the Heunebur -- Fig. 2: Plan view of Tumulus 17 showing the remains of the primary cremation grave (Gr. 5) in the central enclosure and the location and orientation of secondary graves. -- Fig. 3: Photograph of the south and east profiles of the northwest quarter of Tumulus 17 in 1999 showing mound stratigraphy. The distinction between the original (inner) mound and the later (outer) mound layers can be clearly seen (author's photograph). -- Fig. 4: Idealized profile of Tumulus 17 showing original (inner) and later (outer) mound fill and the location of refit pottery fragments (pottery refit data from Schneider 2003: Figure 56). -- Fig. 5: Plan of the structured landscape of the Heuneburg, including the hillfort and additional earthworks, as well as the "chamber" gate and its orientation toward the burial mounds at Gießübel-Talhau. Ditches are shown in grey and wall remnants are sho -- Fig. 6: Plan of the structured landscape of the Glauberg showing the hillfort and a complex of earthworks, including the remains of Tumulus 1 at the northern end of a ditched passageway. The earthworks were interrupted to incorporate older mounds and urn -- Ancestral Places: -- Phil Mason -- Fig. 1: Dolenjska and Bela kraijina in the 1st millennium BC, showing major settlements (After Dular 1993: 103, fig. 1 -- with additions from Dular 1985: 31, fig. 12 -- ANSl 1975 -- Dular and Tecco Hvala 2007 -- drawn by Ildikó Pintér). 1- Vače -- 2- Molnik -- 3- Mag.
Fig. 2: Plan of the late prehistoric settlement complex at Vinji vrh (Source: Agencija RS za okolje.
title_sub towards an archaeology of recycling /
title_full Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling / edited by Dragoş Gheorghiu and Phil Mason.
title_fullStr Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling / edited by Dragoş Gheorghiu and Phil Mason.
title_full_unstemmed Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling / edited by Dragoş Gheorghiu and Phil Mason.
title_auth Working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling /
title_new Working with the past :
title_sort working with the past : towards an archaeology of recycling /
series Archaeopress archaeology
series2 Archaeopress archaeology
publisher Archaeopress Publishing Ltd,
publishDate 2017
physical 1 online resource (viii, 135 pages) : illustrations.
edition 1st ed.
contents Cover -- Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- List of Figures and Plates -- Contributors -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Cycling and Recycling Seen through a Critical Assessment of the Taphonomic Process -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Prehistoric Artefacts as Sustainable Materials -- Lolita Nikolova -- Recycling Power and Place: -- The Many Lives of Traprain Law, SE Scotland -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Experimenting the Chalcolithic Ritual Technologies of Construction and Deconstruction -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Copper and Bronzes: -- The Birth of Complete Recycling in The Bronze Age -- Davide Delfino -- Rock Art Recycled? -- On the Use of Bronze Age Rock Art Sites during the Iron Age in Southern Scandinavia -- Per Nilsson -- Recycled Memories: -- The Past and Present in Early Iron Age Landscapes of Southern Germany -- Matthew L. Murray -- Ancestral Places: -- The Creation and Recycling of Monumental Landscapes in South-Eastern Slovenia in The 1st Millennium BC and the 1st Millennium AD -- Phil Mason -- Recycling Pots, Places and Practices: -- The Roman Cemetery at Podlipoglav -- Bernarda Županek and Irena Sivec -- Secondary use of storage vessels and household pottery during the late middle Ages: -- pottery in vaults as a case study -- Marta Caroscio -- The Reuse of Materials During the Medieval and Post-Medieval Periods: -- A Case Study of Recycling Building Materials in Rothwell, near Leeds, England -- George Nash -- Plate 1: Item of war turned into a child's toy. An example of use and reuse from a Bedouin camp in Jordan. Image R.R. Dods 1990. -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Fig 1: Karl Popper's Three Worlds of Knowledge. (http://www.knowledgejump.com/knowledge/popper.html).
Fig 2: Flow model for archaeological materials adapted and expanded from Schiffer (1972: 158-159), Lange and Rydberg (1972), and Clarke (1968: 36). Note the material remains of subject culture (1) in systemic contexts of GROUP 2 and GROUP 3 (the archaeolo -- Fig. 3: Model of the linkages/relationships of taphonomies I through IV. The main feature is diminishment of information. Three dimensions of space (in the diagram represented by the cube) and the dimension of time (represented by the movement into the vi -- Chart 1: CONTEXTS AND THEIR MEANING FOR FIGS 2 and 3 -- Plate 2: Recycling discarded items witin a culture (potential Group 1 returned to Group 1). (Hudson 2009) -- Plate 3: Dumpster diving. Recycling of food from discard area. Julia Golomb (left) and Alison Abreu-Garcia, both of Somerville, mine a dumpster of a metro-area grocery store. (Baker 2009 with Globe photo by Gretchen Ertl) -- Plate 4: Mahalapye, Botswana traditional house with walled 'front yard'. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mahalapye_traditional_house_ cropped.jpg accessed 22.01.2017) -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Lolita Nikolova -- Scheme 1: Societal components related to sustainability: production (1), repairing (2), secondary use (3), recycling (4) and wasting (5). -- Scheme 2: Prehistoric fragmented pottery as a sustainable material: non-building (A), foundation of paths (B), and building material (C). -- Scheme 3: Explanatory models of obtaining of earlier prehistoric fragmented pottery for use in later levels: by digging pits in the village (A), digging ditches in or around the village (B), obtaining soil from the periphery of the village (C), rituals (D -- Scheme 4: Modelling of possible reasons for finding fragmented pottery in prehistoric levels -- Recycling Power and Place: -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter.
Fig. 1: Location map (drawn by Rachael Kershaw) -- Fig. 2: Traprain Law, East Lothian (photo: Ian Armit) -- Fig. 3: Simplified plan of Traprain Law showing the main focal areas of excavation (drawn by Libby Mulqueeny) -- Fig. 4: AMS dates from Traprain Law, funded by Historic Scotland, calibrated using Oxcal 4 (Bronk Ramsey 2009, Reimer et al. 2004) -- Fig. 5: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 6: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 7: Stone 'plaque' made from fragment of the linear rock art (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 8: North Berwick Law framed in the out-turned entrance-way to the innermost enclosure at Traprain Law (photo: Ian Armit) -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Fig. 1: The experimental reconstruction by the author of the first level of dwelling in a Chalcolithic settlement (Vădastra 2003). -- Fig. 2: Uzunu tell used as a clay quarry by villagers (2007). -- Fig. 3: Fishermen houses at the base of Hârşova tell (2005). -- Fig. 4: The building of a wattle and daub house (2003). -- Fig. 5: Fragment of a burned wall with visible vegetal straws. (Sultana tell). -- Fig. 6: A foundation trench (Vădastra experiments 2003). -- Fig. 7: The ceramic wall of a burned house (Vădastra 2006). -- Fig. 8: Unburned part of a structural post (Vădastra 2010). -- Fig. 10: An unburned wattle and daub house left eight years to weathering with a recyclable wooden structure (Vădastra 2011). -- Fig. 9: The burned down house three years after the collapse (Vădastra 2009). -- Fig. 11: A mass of large burned architectural fragments (Uzunu tell, 2007) -- Fig. 12: Several layers of burned dwellings separated by levelling layers (Hârşova tell, 2005) -- Copper and Bronzes: -- Davide Delfino.
Fig. 1: Investigated areas -- Alpine region (A) and Atlantic Iberian Peninsula (B) -- Fig. 2: Alpine region: the copper resources (black circles) and cited sites (1. Baragalla -- 2. Casse Rousse -- 3. Pinerolo -- 4. Bric della Sorte -- 5. St. Pierre d' Albigny -- 6. Meytet -- 7.Lugana Vecchia -- 8. Castellarano -- 9. Frattesina di Fratta Polesine -- 10. S. -- Fig. 3: Bric della Sorte closet (Savona-Liguria) (Image of Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici della Liguria). -- Fig. 4: Atlantic Iberian Peninsula: the copper (circles) and tin (triangles) resources and citied sites (1. Quinta do Ervedal -- 2. Casal dos Fieis de Deus -- 3. Vila Cobva de Perrinho -- 4. Ria Huelva -- 5. Castro de Nossa Senhora de Guia -- 6. Castelejo -- 7/8. Ale -- Fig. 5: Porto do Concelho closet (Mação- Pinhal Interior). -- Fig. 6: Lugana Vecchia scraps in settlement (Brescia- Lombardia) (Elaborate from De Marinis 2006a: 1298,1300). -- Fig. 7: Frattesina di Fratta Polesine scraps in metallurgical workshop No. 4 (Padova-Veneto). -- Rock Art Recycled? -- Per Nilsson -- Fig. 1. Map showing the location of the Himmelstalund region. -- Fig. 2: Map showing the rock art site at Himmelstalund with the location of the hearths and the settlement remains. -- Fig. 3: A house from the Early Iron Age was found between the rock art site and the nearby river Motala Ström. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 4: Two hearths were found beneath one of the panels at Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 5: Rock art covered with fire cracked stones at Leonardsberg. From Nordén 1925. -- Fig. 6: The cemetery at Fiskeby. Map by Per Lundström, copy from the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities. -- Fig. 7: At Lille Strandbygård on the Danish island of Bornholm, two houses were found beside the rock art. From Sørensen 2006: 72.
Fig. 8: The runic inscription from Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Recycled Memories: -- Matthew L. Murray -- Fig. 1: Location of Tumulus 17 (excavated in 1999-2000 as part of the Landscape of Ancestors project) in the Speckhau (Hohmichele) mound group near the Heuneburg. The map shows mounds and mound groups that are traditionally considered part of the Heunebur -- Fig. 2: Plan view of Tumulus 17 showing the remains of the primary cremation grave (Gr. 5) in the central enclosure and the location and orientation of secondary graves. -- Fig. 3: Photograph of the south and east profiles of the northwest quarter of Tumulus 17 in 1999 showing mound stratigraphy. The distinction between the original (inner) mound and the later (outer) mound layers can be clearly seen (author's photograph). -- Fig. 4: Idealized profile of Tumulus 17 showing original (inner) and later (outer) mound fill and the location of refit pottery fragments (pottery refit data from Schneider 2003: Figure 56). -- Fig. 5: Plan of the structured landscape of the Heuneburg, including the hillfort and additional earthworks, as well as the "chamber" gate and its orientation toward the burial mounds at Gießübel-Talhau. Ditches are shown in grey and wall remnants are sho -- Fig. 6: Plan of the structured landscape of the Glauberg showing the hillfort and a complex of earthworks, including the remains of Tumulus 1 at the northern end of a ditched passageway. The earthworks were interrupted to incorporate older mounds and urn -- Ancestral Places: -- Phil Mason -- Fig. 1: Dolenjska and Bela kraijina in the 1st millennium BC, showing major settlements (After Dular 1993: 103, fig. 1 -- with additions from Dular 1985: 31, fig. 12 -- ANSl 1975 -- Dular and Tecco Hvala 2007 -- drawn by Ildikó Pintér). 1- Vače -- 2- Molnik -- 3- Mag.
Fig. 2: Plan of the late prehistoric settlement complex at Vinji vrh (Source: Agencija RS za okolje.
isbn 1-78491-630-7
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callnumber-first T - Technology
callnumber-subject TP - Chemical Technology
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callnumber-sort TP 3995 W675 42017
illustrated Illustrated
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dewey-tens 600 - Technology
dewey-ones 604 - Special topics
dewey-full 604.6
dewey-sort 3604.6
dewey-raw 604.6
dewey-search 604.6
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fullrecord <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><collection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim"><record><leader>10828nam a2200433 i 4500</leader><controlfield tag="001">993669875604498</controlfield><controlfield tag="005">20240513140601.0</controlfield><controlfield tag="006">m o d | </controlfield><controlfield tag="007">cr cnu||||||||</controlfield><controlfield tag="008">201215s2017 enka o 000 0 eng d</controlfield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1-78491-630-7</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(CKB)4100000011480674</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(MiAaPQ)EBC6362712</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(EXLCZ)994100000011480674</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="b">eng</subfield><subfield code="e">rda</subfield><subfield code="e">pn</subfield><subfield code="c">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="d">MiAaPQ</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="050" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">TP995</subfield><subfield code="b">.W675 2017</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="082" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">604.6</subfield><subfield code="2">23</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="0" ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Working with the past :</subfield><subfield code="b">towards an archaeology of recycling /</subfield><subfield code="c">edited by Dragoş Gheorghiu and Phil Mason.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="250" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1st ed.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Oxford :</subfield><subfield code="b">Archaeopress Publishing Ltd,</subfield><subfield code="c">[2017]</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">©2017</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (viii, 135 pages) :</subfield><subfield code="b">illustrations.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Archaeopress archaeology</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on print version record.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">This book invites archaeologists to approach the significant process of recycling within the archaeological record at two different levels: of artefacts and of landscape.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Cover -- Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- List of Figures and Plates -- Contributors -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Cycling and Recycling Seen through a Critical Assessment of the Taphonomic Process -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Prehistoric Artefacts as Sustainable Materials -- Lolita Nikolova -- Recycling Power and Place: -- The Many Lives of Traprain Law, SE Scotland -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Experimenting the Chalcolithic Ritual Technologies of Construction and Deconstruction -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Copper and Bronzes: -- The Birth of Complete Recycling in The Bronze Age -- Davide Delfino -- Rock Art Recycled? -- On the Use of Bronze Age Rock Art Sites during the Iron Age in Southern Scandinavia -- Per Nilsson -- Recycled Memories: -- The Past and Present in Early Iron Age Landscapes of Southern Germany -- Matthew L. Murray -- Ancestral Places: -- The Creation and Recycling of Monumental Landscapes in South-Eastern Slovenia in The 1st Millennium BC and the 1st Millennium AD -- Phil Mason -- Recycling Pots, Places and Practices: -- The Roman Cemetery at Podlipoglav -- Bernarda Županek and Irena Sivec -- Secondary use of storage vessels and household pottery during the late middle Ages: -- pottery in vaults as a case study -- Marta Caroscio -- The Reuse of Materials During the Medieval and Post-Medieval Periods: -- A Case Study of Recycling Building Materials in Rothwell, near Leeds, England -- George Nash -- Plate 1: Item of war turned into a child's toy. An example of use and reuse from a Bedouin camp in Jordan. Image R.R. Dods 1990. -- The Never Ending Journey: -- Roberta Robin Dods -- Fig 1: Karl Popper's Three Worlds of Knowledge. (http://www.knowledgejump.com/knowledge/popper.html).</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Fig 2: Flow model for archaeological materials adapted and expanded from Schiffer (1972: 158-159), Lange and Rydberg (1972), and Clarke (1968: 36). Note the material remains of subject culture (1) in systemic contexts of GROUP 2 and GROUP 3 (the archaeolo -- Fig. 3: Model of the linkages/relationships of taphonomies I through IV. The main feature is diminishment of information. Three dimensions of space (in the diagram represented by the cube) and the dimension of time (represented by the movement into the vi -- Chart 1: CONTEXTS AND THEIR MEANING FOR FIGS 2 and 3 -- Plate 2: Recycling discarded items witin a culture (potential Group 1 returned to Group 1). (Hudson 2009) -- Plate 3: Dumpster diving. Recycling of food from discard area. Julia Golomb (left) and Alison Abreu-Garcia, both of Somerville, mine a dumpster of a metro-area grocery store. (Baker 2009 with Globe photo by Gretchen Ertl) -- Plate 4: Mahalapye, Botswana traditional house with walled 'front yard'. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mahalapye_traditional_house_ cropped.jpg accessed 22.01.2017) -- Sustainability, Health, and Society: -- Lolita Nikolova -- Scheme 1: Societal components related to sustainability: production (1), repairing (2), secondary use (3), recycling (4) and wasting (5). -- Scheme 2: Prehistoric fragmented pottery as a sustainable material: non-building (A), foundation of paths (B), and building material (C). -- Scheme 3: Explanatory models of obtaining of earlier prehistoric fragmented pottery for use in later levels: by digging pits in the village (A), digging ditches in or around the village (B), obtaining soil from the periphery of the village (C), rituals (D -- Scheme 4: Modelling of possible reasons for finding fragmented pottery in prehistoric levels -- Recycling Power and Place: -- Ian Armit, Andrew Dunwell, Fraser Hunter.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Fig. 1: Location map (drawn by Rachael Kershaw) -- Fig. 2: Traprain Law, East Lothian (photo: Ian Armit) -- Fig. 3: Simplified plan of Traprain Law showing the main focal areas of excavation (drawn by Libby Mulqueeny) -- Fig. 4: AMS dates from Traprain Law, funded by Historic Scotland, calibrated using Oxcal 4 (Bronk Ramsey 2009, Reimer et al. 2004) -- Fig. 5: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 6: The axe hoard found in the burnt out area of Traprain Law in 2004 (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 7: Stone 'plaque' made from fragment of the linear rock art (National Museums of Scotland) -- Fig. 8: North Berwick Law framed in the out-turned entrance-way to the innermost enclosure at Traprain Law (photo: Ian Armit) -- Tells as Recycled Places. -- Dragoş Gheorghiu -- Fig. 1: The experimental reconstruction by the author of the first level of dwelling in a Chalcolithic settlement (Vădastra 2003). -- Fig. 2: Uzunu tell used as a clay quarry by villagers (2007). -- Fig. 3: Fishermen houses at the base of Hârşova tell (2005). -- Fig. 4: The building of a wattle and daub house (2003). -- Fig. 5: Fragment of a burned wall with visible vegetal straws. (Sultana tell). -- Fig. 6: A foundation trench (Vădastra experiments 2003). -- Fig. 7: The ceramic wall of a burned house (Vădastra 2006). -- Fig. 8: Unburned part of a structural post (Vădastra 2010). -- Fig. 10: An unburned wattle and daub house left eight years to weathering with a recyclable wooden structure (Vădastra 2011). -- Fig. 9: The burned down house three years after the collapse (Vădastra 2009). -- Fig. 11: A mass of large burned architectural fragments (Uzunu tell, 2007) -- Fig. 12: Several layers of burned dwellings separated by levelling layers (Hârşova tell, 2005) -- Copper and Bronzes: -- Davide Delfino.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Fig. 1: Investigated areas -- Alpine region (A) and Atlantic Iberian Peninsula (B) -- Fig. 2: Alpine region: the copper resources (black circles) and cited sites (1. Baragalla -- 2. Casse Rousse -- 3. Pinerolo -- 4. Bric della Sorte -- 5. St. Pierre d' Albigny -- 6. Meytet -- 7.Lugana Vecchia -- 8. Castellarano -- 9. Frattesina di Fratta Polesine -- 10. S. -- Fig. 3: Bric della Sorte closet (Savona-Liguria) (Image of Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici della Liguria). -- Fig. 4: Atlantic Iberian Peninsula: the copper (circles) and tin (triangles) resources and citied sites (1. Quinta do Ervedal -- 2. Casal dos Fieis de Deus -- 3. Vila Cobva de Perrinho -- 4. Ria Huelva -- 5. Castro de Nossa Senhora de Guia -- 6. Castelejo -- 7/8. Ale -- Fig. 5: Porto do Concelho closet (Mação- Pinhal Interior). -- Fig. 6: Lugana Vecchia scraps in settlement (Brescia- Lombardia) (Elaborate from De Marinis 2006a: 1298,1300). -- Fig. 7: Frattesina di Fratta Polesine scraps in metallurgical workshop No. 4 (Padova-Veneto). -- Rock Art Recycled? -- Per Nilsson -- Fig. 1. Map showing the location of the Himmelstalund region. -- Fig. 2: Map showing the rock art site at Himmelstalund with the location of the hearths and the settlement remains. -- Fig. 3: A house from the Early Iron Age was found between the rock art site and the nearby river Motala Ström. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 4: Two hearths were found beneath one of the panels at Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Fig. 5: Rock art covered with fire cracked stones at Leonardsberg. From Nordén 1925. -- Fig. 6: The cemetery at Fiskeby. Map by Per Lundström, copy from the Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities. -- Fig. 7: At Lille Strandbygård on the Danish island of Bornholm, two houses were found beside the rock art. From Sørensen 2006: 72.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Fig. 8: The runic inscription from Himmelstalund. Photo Per Nilsson. -- Recycled Memories: -- Matthew L. 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The distinction between the original (inner) mound and the later (outer) mound layers can be clearly seen (author's photograph). -- Fig. 4: Idealized profile of Tumulus 17 showing original (inner) and later (outer) mound fill and the location of refit pottery fragments (pottery refit data from Schneider 2003: Figure 56). -- Fig. 5: Plan of the structured landscape of the Heuneburg, including the hillfort and additional earthworks, as well as the "chamber" gate and its orientation toward the burial mounds at Gießübel-Talhau. Ditches are shown in grey and wall remnants are sho -- Fig. 6: Plan of the structured landscape of the Glauberg showing the hillfort and a complex of earthworks, including the remains of Tumulus 1 at the northern end of a ditched passageway. 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