Spelling suggestions: "subject:"flatness"" "subject:"fatness""
1 |
Power Over Time: An Overview of the Old Scatness Broch ExcavationsDockrill, Stephen, Batt, Catherine M. January 2004 (has links)
No
|
2 |
Excavations at Old Scatness, Shetland. Volume 3: The Post-medieval townshipDockrill, Stephen, Bond, Julie, Turner, V.E., Brown, L.D., Bashford, D.J., Cussans, Julia E., Nicholson, R.A. 07 June 2019 (has links)
No
|
3 |
Dating at Old ScatnessOutram, Zoe, Batt, Catherine M. January 2010 (has links)
No
|
4 |
Excavations at Old Scatness, Shetland. Volume 1: The Pictish Village and Viking SettlementDockrill, Stephen J., Bond, Julie M., Turner, V.E., Brown, L. D., Bashford, D.J., Cussans, J.E., Nicholson, R.A. January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
|
5 |
Excavations at Old Scatness, Shetland, Volume 2: The Broch and Iron Age VillageDockrill, Stephen, Bond, Julie, Turner, V.E., Brown, L.D., Bashford, D.J., Cussans, Julia E., Nicholson, R.A. January 2015 (has links)
No / Excavations at Old Scatness Volume 2: The Broch and Iron Age Village, is the second title in the series from the extensive excavation project carried out at Old Scatness, following on from the publication of the first volume in 2010.
Perhaps the most complex archaeological excavation ever to have been carried out in Scotland, the Scatness project used cutting edge scientific techniques. The second volume examines the earliest phases of the archaeological remains. These start with the Neolithic remains but the focus of the volume is on the exceptionally well preserved Iron Age Broch and Village, dating between 400BC – AD400. - Publisher.
|
6 |
Old Scatness excavation manual: A case study in archaeological recording.Dockrill, Stephen, Bond, Julie, Turner, V.E., Brown, L.D. January 2008 (has links)
No
|
7 |
Excavations at Old Scatness, Shetland. Volume 1: The Pictish Village and Viking SettlementDockrill, Stephen, Bond, Julie, Turner, V.E., Brown, L.D., Bashford, D.J., Cussans, Julia E., Nicholson, R.A. January 2010 (has links)
No
|
8 |
Bayesian methods applied to the interpretation of multiple OSL dates: high precision sediment ages from Old Scatness Broch excavations, Shetland Isles.Rhodes, E.J., Bronk Ramsey, C., Outram, Zoe, Batt, Catherine M., Willis, Laura H., Dockrill, Stephen, Bond, Julie 12 October 2009 (has links)
No / In this paper, we illustrate the ways in which Bayesian statistical techniques may be used to enhance chronological resolution when applied to a series of OSL sediment dates. Such application can achieve an optimal chronological model by incorporating stratigraphic and age information. The application to luminescence data is not straightforward owing to the sources of uncertainty in each date, and here we present one solution to overcoming these difficulties, and introduce the concept of "unshared systematic" errors. Using OSL sediment dates from the site of Old Scatness Broch, Shetland Isles, UK, many measured with a high degree of precision, we illustrate some of the ways in which Bayesian techniques may be applied, as a tool for assessing systematic errors when combined with independent chronological information, and to determine the optimum chronological information for specific events and contexts. We provide a detailed procedure for the application of Bayesian methods to OSL dates using the widely available radiocarbon calibration programme OxCal.
|
9 |
The architecture of food: Consumption and society in the Iron Age of Atlantic Scotland, with special reference to the site of Old Scatness, Shetland.Summers, John R. January 2011 (has links)
Food is the foundation upon which societies are built. It is a means of survival, a source of wealth and prosperity and can be used as a means of social display. In Iron Age Atlantic Scotland, a wide range of food resources were open to exploitation. Among these, barley is likely to have been an important backbone to the system. Far from being at the mercy of the elements, the Iron Age population of Atlantic Scotland was able to extract surpluses of food from the landscape which could be manipulated for social, political and economic gain. One means through which this could be achieved is feasting, a practice considered significant elsewhere in the Iron Age.
With such ideas at its core, this thesis examines the main arenas for consumption events in Iron Age Atlantic Scotland (dwellings) in detail, considering also the underpinnings of the system in terms of food production and accumulation, in particular the barley crop. The distribution of food processing and preparation between a dwelling and its associated ancillary buildings at Old Scatness provides insights into the organisation of life on the settlement.
|
10 |
The architecture of food : consumption and society in the Iron Age of Atlantic Scotland, with special reference to the site of Old Scatness, ShetlandSummers, John Richard January 2011 (has links)
Food is the foundation upon which societies are built. It is a means of survival, a source of wealth and prosperity and can be used as a means of social display. In Iron Age Atlantic Scotland, a wide range of food resources were open to exploitation. Among these, barley is likely to have been an important backbone to the system. Far from being at the mercy of the elements, the Iron Age population of Atlantic Scotland was able to extract surpluses of food from the landscape which could be manipulated for social, political and economic gain. One means through which this could be achieved is feasting, a practice considered significant elsewhere in the Iron Age. With such ideas at its core, this thesis examines the main arenas for consumption events in Iron Age Atlantic Scotland (dwellings) in detail, considering also the underpinnings of the system in terms of food production and accumulation, in particular the barley crop. The distribution of food processing and preparation between a dwelling and its associated ancillary buildings at Old Scatness provides insights into the organisation of life on the settlement.
|
Page generated in 0.0538 seconds