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         British Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Industrial Archaeology of Lancashire (Industrial Archaeology of British Isles) by Owen Ashmore, 1969-08
  2. The statue of Idri-mi (Occasional publications of the British Institute of Archaeology in Ankara) by Sidney Smith, 1949
  3. A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine: Volume I (British Academy Monographs in Archaeology)
  4. Studies in the History and Topography of Lycia in Memoriam (British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monographs, 19) by A. S. Hall, 1994-12
  5. Age By Age : Landmarks of British Archaeology by Ronald Jessup, 1967
  6. Prehistoric and Romano-British Occupation of the Floodplains and a Terrace of the River Thames (Wessex Archaeology Report) by I. Barnes, Christine A. Butterworth, et all 1997-12-31
  7. Gloucestershire woollen mills: industrial archaeology (The Industrial archaeology of the British Isles) by Jennifer Tann, 1967
  8. Industrial Archaeology of the Bristol Region (Industrial Archaeology of British Isles) by R.A. Buchanan, Neil Cossons, 1969-05
  9. Windsor: Medieval Archaeology, Art and Architecture of the Thames Valley (British Archaeological Association Conference Transactions, 25) (British Archaeological ... Association Conference Transactions, 25)
  10. Industrial Archaeology of the Isle of Man (Industrial Archaeology of British Isles) by T.A. Bawden, 1972-02-24
  11. Manual of British Archaeology by BoutellCharles, 1858
  12. Archaeology in the Pennines (British Archaeological Reports (BAR))
  13. Iron Age and Romano-British Settlements and Landscapes of Salisbury Plain (Wessex Archaeology Report) by M. G. Fulford, A. B. Powell, et all 2008-04-30
  14. Settlement Patterns in the Oxford Region; Excavations at the Abingdon Causewayed and Other Sites: Research Report No. 44 (Council for British Archaeology) by A. W. R. Whittle (Editor) H. J. Case (Editor), 1982

81. Council For British Archaeology
The Council for british archaeology works to promote the study and safeguarding of Britain s historic environment, to provide a forum for archaeological opinion
http://www.wcl.org.uk/Link_Members/CBA.htm
About WCL Joint Links How to Join Contact Us ... Guide to Acronyms The Council for British Archaeology works to promote the study and safeguarding of Britain's historic environment, to provide a forum for archaeological opinion, and to improve public interest in, and knowledge of, Britain's past. Tel: URL: www.britarch.ac.uk
What's New? A future for our seas - Marine Campaign information Defra Modernisation Review This page was last updated on: 26/05/04

82. Council For British Archaeology: Science-fiction & Fantasy Forums
Council for british archaeology. Their publication british archaeology reads as very interesting got a couple of copies at home.
http://www.chronicles-network.net/forum/showthread.php?t=938

83. British Archaeology Magazine, December 2001
Peter Fowler explains in british archaeology magazine how landscape archaeology evolved over the last 50 years.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba62/feat2.shtml
Issue 62
December 2001
Contents
news
Detectorists report thousands of new finds to archaeologists Neolithic farmhouse found in Scotland Lost Roman town abandoned 2,000 years ago found in Kent Roman water-lifting machinery unearthed in London ... In Brief
features
Citadel of the Scots
Alan Lane on recent excavations at Dunadd hillfort Reading the land
Peter Fowler on the antiquity of the British landscape Great sites: Meols
David Griffiths on a once-great port now lost to the sea
letters
On black and brown rats, medieval crafts and cannibalism
issues
George Lambrick on Government policy on the heritage
Peter Ellis
Regular column
books
Prehistory in the Peak by Mark Edmonds and Tim Seaborne Shadows in the Soil by Tony Waldron Europe’s First Farmers edited by T Douglas Price Landscapes of Lordship by Robert Liddiard ...
CBA update
favourite finds
Once lost, twice excavated. Richard Brewer’s came from a museum sub-basement. ISSN 1357-4442 Editor Simon Denison
features
Reading the land
50 years ago, most historians thought Britain’s landscape dated mainly from the 18th century. Then landscape archaeology began, and the rest is history, says Peter Fowler Landscape - there's an awful lot of it about in archaeology nowadays. UNESCO now promotes 'cultural landscapes' as candidates for World Heritage inscription, and the first 23 sites already exist (including the first in the UK, at Blaenavon in South Wales). A European Landscape Convention was agreed last year, binding signatory Governments to protect landscapes as they do ancient monuments and buildings (although the UK has not yet signed).

84. Zeal.com - Site Profile For British Archaeology - Steel, Duncan, Terror In The S
british archaeology Steel, Duncan, Terror in the Sky Profile, Edit value 75. Title, british archaeology - Steel, Duncan, Terror in the Sky.
http://zeal.com/website/profile.jhtml?cid=1132837&wid=70087565

85. Council For British Archaeology
You are here Home Council for british archaeology, Login to My Infotree. Advanced Search. Council for british archaeology Includes some FullText (CBA)
http://infotree.library.ohiou.edu/single-records/1970.html
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... Ask a Librarian You are here: Home > Council for British Archaeology Login to My Infotree Advanced Search QuickLinks > Library Catalogs ALICE Online Catalog OhioLINK Central Catalog WorldCat (OU only) Databases Academic Search Premier (OU only) Lexis-Nexis (OU only) E-Journal Gateway Web Searching Academic Info Google Yahoo Reference Tools American Heritage Dictionary Oxford English Dictionary Britannica Online (OU only) AnyWho Phone Directory Library Services Course Reserves Interlibrary Loan
Council for British Archaeology
Includes some Full-Text
(CBA)
An "Internet information service," dedicated to the study and safeguarding of Britain's historic environment, that features online publications, an archaeology data service, and current archaeology news. Includes full-text access to British Archaeology magazine (1995-present) and research reports dating back to 1955.
URL: http://www.britarch.ac.uk/
Subjects: Humanities Archaeology Social Sciences Anthropology
Types: Websites (general)
Places: Great Britain If you have questions, comments, or suggestions, please use the Ohio University Libraries'

86. Mondo Times - British Archaeology Magazine - United Kingdom Archaeology Magazine
british archaeology Magazine. United Kingdom archaeology magazine at Mondo Times. british archaeology Magazine. british archaeology Magazine Profile.
http://www.mondotimes.com/2/topics/3/science/5/10940
The worldwide media guide TM
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You are here Home Major Media Science Archaeology British Archaeology In region Africa Asia Europe Middle East ... South America
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Owner Council for British Archaeology Ratings Content: Not yet rated Political Bias: Not yet rated Credibility: Not yet rated Sponsor Link Rate British Archaeology Magazine See All Ratings Status: Not logged in Member Services Mondo Times Poll Will Iraq be a beacon of democracy in the Arab world? Yes No See all polls Free Trade Magazines Advanced Imaging Functional Foods ... Mondo Code LLC By using this site you agree to the Terms of Service

87. The Megalithic Portal And Megalith Map: October 2001 British Archaeology Magazin
October 2001 british archaeology Magazine Online Home of the Megarak. Web Picks October 2001 british archaeology Magazine Online.
http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=2146410468

88. AskNCVO - Council For British Archaeology (CBA)
Council for british archaeology (CBA). Related NCVO resources icon View NCVO resources related to this document. Bowes Morrell House 111 Walmgate York Y01 9WA.
http://www.ncvo-vol.org.uk/asp/search/docViewer.aspx?siteID=2&sID=37&documentID=

89. ENNHO
The Council...... ENNHO DIRECTORY AND LINKS Council for british archaeology ORGANISATION DETAILS NonGovernmental organisation
http://www.ennho.org/directory.stm?x=65905

90. Young Archaeologists' Club Communications Officer, Council For British Archaeolo
Young Archaeologists Club Communications Officer Council for british archaeology The successful applicant will ideally have experience both of working with
http://www.graduatelink.com/jobs/job.asp?vacID=5703

91. British Archaeology, No 45, June 1999: Features
In an article for british archaeology magazine, space researcher Duncan Steel argues that Stonehenge was built to predict meteor showers.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba45/ba45feat.html#steel
ISSN 1357-4442 Editor: Simon Denison
Issue no 45, June 1999
FEATURES
Neanderthals, sex and modern humans
A boy buried 24,000 years ago proves the two species did interbreed, writes Paul Pettitt The relationship between modern humans and Neanderthals has been the subject of vigorous debate for many years. Did the two species inter-breed? Did they come into contact at all, during the tens of thousands of years of their co-existence on Earth? (See BA March , and Letters , May.) In 1996, DNA from the original Neander valley Neanderthal remains was extracted and analysed. This work demonstrated that there were at least 500,000 years of evolutionary divergence between our own species and the c 40,000 year old Neanderthal in question, diminishing the likelihood that the two species intermixed. Now, however, direct evidence has come to light from Iberia, demonstrating unequivocally that contact took place and was probably quite extensive on the peninsula. The evidence was the discovery in November last year of an Early Upper Palaeolithic burial, over 24,000 years old, at the Abrigo do Lagar Velho in central western Portugal. The burial was of a young boy who was part Neanderthal, part modern human. His discovery has dramatically changed our perspective on Neanderthal extinction and the spread of our own species across Europe. The Ebro river, which runs NW-SE across the neck of the Iberian peninsula, has recently come to be seen by some researchers as a major environmental boundary in the Upper Pleistocene. The earliest anatomically modern human colonists - dating to

92. Detailansicht: 'British Archaeology (GB)' [Archäologie Online : Guide]
Translate this page Archäologie, online, Guide british archaeology (GB), british archaeology (GB) Online-Version des Magazins des Council of british archaeology.
http://www.archaeologie-online.de/links/detail/582.php

Guide
: British Archaeology (GB)
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British Archaeology (GB) Online-Version des Magazins des Council of British Archaeology . Enthalten sind sämtliche Beiträge seit Erscheinen 1995. Sprache: englisch Diesen Eintrag ...weiterempfehlen ...als fehlerhaft melden ...bewerten ...kommentieren Statistik für diesen Eintrag aufgenommen: Status: OK Hits: Der Eintrag wurde bisher 283 mal angeklickt Wertung: 9.00 von max. 10 Punkten, bei 1 abgegebenen Stimmen Kommentare: Zu diesem Eintrag wurde bisher kein Kommentar abgegeben. Empfehlungen: Der Eintrag wurde bisher noch nicht von Besuchern weiterempfohlen Dieser Eintrag ist in folgenden Kategorien vorhanden:

93. British Archaeology, No 35, June 1998: Regions
The Vikings transformed culture and society in 9th11th century East Anglia, writes Andrew Rogerson in british archaeology.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba35/ba35regs.html
ISSN 1357-4442 Editor: Simon Denison
Issue no 35, June 1998
REGIONS
Vikings and the new East Anglian towns
The Vikings transformed culture and society in 9th-11th century East Anglia, writes Andrew Rogerson The Vikings arrived in force in East Anglia in 866, and in 870 they killed the East Anglian king, Edmund. However, it was not until after the Treaty of Wedmore in 878, agreed between Alfred the Great of Wessex and Guthrum of Denmark, that Viking settlement of East Anglia began in earnest. As the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle put it, Guthrum's Viking army proceeded to `share out' the land, which remained part of the Danelaw for the next 40 years. The great questions that have always been asked about this Viking settlement include how numerous the newcomers were, and how much of the land they `shared out'. Were new settlements established by wholesale migration of farmers, with indigenous agricultural communities displaced, or was an upper class of warriors and their families imposed on a densely populated land? The likelihood, in my view, is that the actual number of settlers was relatively small, even though their cultural influence in the region was large. Archaeological evidence from East Anglia over recent years shows that, whatever the number of immigrants, Scandinavian-influenced artefacts achieved very wide circulation in the 9th-11th centuries. More remarkably, evidence from towns in the region shows that the arrival of Vikings provided a kick start to English urbanisation after the long Anglo-Saxon lull, mirroring evidence from elsewhere in eastern England.

94. Culture.fr : Council For British Archaeology - Internet Information Service

http://www.culture.fr/Groups/archeologie/notice_17_fr

Accueil
Archéologie Council for British Archaeolog... 5000 sites internet, 10000 manifestations culturelles, 1000 musées à découvrir... recherche avancée Espace jeunes Archéologie Architecture ... www.culture.gouv.fr
le site du ministère de la culture et de la communication español english français Council for British Archaeology - Internet Information Service CBA a pour mission l'étude et la sauvegarde le patrimoine historique de la Grande-Bretagne, propose un forum sur l'archéologie et a un rôle d'information pour le grand public.Son site constitue le portail de la recherche archéologique britannique : périodiques, nouvelles, actualités, institutions et organismes, bases de données, liste de liens. (http://www.britarch.ac.uk/) Langues anglais Statuts Ressource externe Retour
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... A propos de ce site

95. British Archaeology Magazine, August 2001
Article by Tim Eaton in british archaeology on the way in which abandoned Roman sites in Britain were plundered for stone by AngloSaxon church builders.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba60/feat2.shtml
Issue 60
August 2001
Contents
news
Earliest evidence found of settlers in Scotland Intact Bronze Age necklace found near Dunblane Developers 'must record' unlisted barns Roman salt-manufacturing town uncovered in Cheshire ... In Brief
features
Great sites
David Gaimster on the excavation of Nonsuch Palace Old ruins, new world
Tim Eaton on Saxon churchbuilders' liking for Roman stone Lest we remember
Howard Williams on 'forgetting' at Bronze Age funerals
letters
On sources of water at hillforts, and cannibalism
issues
For education read archaeology, writes George Lambrick
Peter Ellis
Regular column
books
Two on Hadrian's Wall reviewed by Paul Birdwell One on Neanderthals reviewed by Paul Pettitt Two on Gladiators reviewed by Rosalind Niblett And one on King Arthur's Round Table reviewed by Paul Stamper ...
CBA update
favourite finds
Bob Bewley's was a collared urn in a cremation pit. ISSN 1357-4442 Editor Simon Denison
features
Old ruins, new world
Abandoned Roman sites in Britain were plundered for stone by Anglo-Saxon church builders. Tim Eaton investigates When Roman troops were withdrawn from Britain at the beginning of the 5th century, in response to insecurity at the heart of the Empire, they left behind a landscape littered with abandoned settlements - small military outposts and large walled forts, humble farmsteads and sumptuous villas, unpretentious towns and monumental regional capitals.

96. Thomson Publishing Services
Home Browse Catalogue Browse Catalogue All Subjects Archaeology british archaeology Previous Next Showing 1 to 5 of 5 Show 10 titles at a time
http://www.thomsonpublishingservices.co.uk/catalog/index.asp?subject=04001

97. UBC Library - MARION
Council for british archaeology. Council for british archaeology. (56 titles); Council for british archaeology. (1 title); Council for british archaeology.
http://dra.library.ubc.ca/MARION/auth?fmt_limit=&lng_limit=&index=A&key=Council

98. British Archaeology, No 12, March 1996: Features
Bone analysis suggests Neolithic people preferred meat to cereals, writes Mike Richards in british archaeology.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba12/ba12feat.html#richards
British Archaeology , no 12, March 1996: Features
Bone analysis suggests Neolithic people preferred meat, writes Mike Richards
`First farmers' with no taste for grain
The Neolithic period is traditionally associated with the beginning of farming, yet in Britain - by contrast with much of the rest of Europe - the evidence has always been thin on the ground. Where are the first farmers' settlements? Where are the fields? The almost complete absence of this kind of evidence has led some archaeologists, over recent years, to question the view that people in Britain actually grew most of their food in the 4th and 3rd millennia BC. Now, a scientific study of Neolithic human bone seems to point in the same revisionist direction. The small-scale study - the first of its kind - of the bones of about 23 Neolithic people from ten sites in central and southern England, suggests that these `first farmers' relied heavily on animal meat for food, or on animal by-products such as milk and cheese, and that plant foods in fact formed little importance in their diet. The bones date from throughout the Neolithic, c c The study was based on the idea that our bodies are made up of organic and inorganic components derived from the foods we have eaten. There are a number of ways of tracing the original food source of some of our tissues, and one way is to look at the relative ratios of certain elements, known as `stable isotopes', in bone protein.

99. British Archaeology Magazine 58, April 2001*
Mike Pitts recalls the day he found an English gunflint on a South pacific island. british archaeology magazine 58.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba58/column2.shtml
Issue 58
April 2001
Contents
news
Earliest evidence of lead mining at Cwmystwyth Fine mosaic floor of Roman dining room preserved in London Defensive spikes point to Roman fear of the North ... In Brief
features
Medieval thatch
John Letts on the survival of medieval plants in thatch Finding the New Rome
Great sites

David Hinton on the 7th century royal site at Yeavering
comment
Voting for archaeology
Simon Denison on Archaeology and the General Election
letters
Cider and beer, Seahenge, Early metal, Water
issues
Why we must redefine 'treasure', by George Lambrick
Peter Ellis
Regular column
books
Circles of Stone by Max Milligan and Aubrey Burl Children and Material Culture edited by Joanna Sofaer Deverenski Wood and Woodworking in Anglo-Scandinavian and Medieval York by Caroel A Morris Air Photo Interpretation for Archaeologists by DR Wilson ...
CBA update
favourite finds
Long reach of the flint knappers. Mike Pitts's find links a Suffolk pub with a South Sea island. ISSN 1357-4442 Editor Simon Denison
favourite finds
Long reach of the flint knappers
Mike Pitts recalls the day he found an English gunflint on a South pacific island As archaeological homes go, I suspect mine is thin on antiquities: I like beauty, not rubbish, and if I had money to buy a complete artefact, I'd exchange it for a modern work of art rather than undermine someone's cultural heritage. But I do have a little wedge of black flint, and it's one of the most precious things I own. To say its story connects a South Pacific island, an 1806 shipwreck, Phil Harding from

100. Serious Links - Academic
Council for british archaeology the gateway to british archaeology online . Mr Donn s Ancient History Page Maintained by Lin Don Donn.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~shil0124/serious/academic.html
Academic Links
Note: Science links have moved to their own page.
Archaeology
Classics

Languages
Mediaeval Studies ...
Miscellaneous
Archaeology
Bath Past
A collection of artcles on the historic buildings of Bath, maintained by Jean Manco
Council for British Archaeology
"the gateway to British archaeology on-line".
Mr Donn's Ancient History Page

Federseemuseum
Bad Buchau; maintained by Joachim Rehmet. "The museum shows the archaeology of late stone age reindeer hunters and lake dwellers from the stone and bronze age."
In German English
Hechingen-Stein Roman Open-Air Museum
"The WWW-pages of the Roman Open-Air Museum in Hechingen-Stein, Germany, which show an excavated Roman "Villa Rustica" dating from the 1st to the 3rd century A.D., have been completely re-designed. They now include a description of the site, a new excavation report, a virtual tour through the museum and the villa and a guestbook."
In German English
Meet the Ancestors
The B.B.C.'s popular archaeology programme.
Prehistoric Web Index
Part of the WWW Virtual Library.

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