The Association for Environmental Archaeology (AEA)

Newsletters

Newsletter 67  (February 2000)

ISSN 1363-6553
Submit information to the newsletter
Editorial
Changes of Address / Appointments
Payments Co-ordinators
News from the Committee
Conferences & Meetings
Courses & Studentships
Publications
AEA Accounts
AEA Conference Booking Form
12th IWGP Conference Form

Copy dates for Newsletter: 20th of the following months - January / April / July / October 

Edited by Wendy Carruthers and Vanessa Straker 

Items for the Newsletter may be submitted on 3.5" floppy disks in IBM-PC format as WordPerfect, Word or ASCII files, Fax or e-mail. Items in typescript or neat manuscript should be sent to Wendy Carruthers (e-mail addresses: wendy.carruthers@virgin.net; V.Straker@Bristol.ac.uk; FAX: 0117 928 7878) 

V. Straker, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, University Rd., BRISTOL, BS8 1SS. 
Wendy Carruthers, Sawmills House, Castellau, Llantrisant, Mid Glamorgan CF72 8LQ (Tel: 01443 223462). 

AEA Membership Secretary: Becky  Nicholson, Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford, BD7 1DP, U.K.  e-mail: r.a.nicholson@bradford.ac.uk


EDITORIAL

We would like to wish everyone a Very Happy New Millennium! 
This first issue of the year 2000 contains further details about the Annual Conference in Guildford (April 14th-16th) and a booking form - please book early. There is also information about the AGM and Committee elections which will be held during the conference. 


ERRATUM: MEMBERSHIP INTERESTS LIST

Our apologies to Greig Campbell for leaving him out of the 1999 Membership Interests List. His details are as follows: 
CAMPBELL, Mr G.E., 150 Essex Road, PORTSMOUTH PO4 8DJ. Taphonomic processes; recovery methods; applied statistics. 


CHANGES OF ADDRESS / APPOINTMENTS

Alison Locker has moved to: 6 Lacets St Leon, Perigord 1, Appt 207, MC 98000, Monaco. Tel: (mobile) +377 (0) 616 772 788. E-mail: alocker@monaco.mc

Nicki Whitehouse has been appointed Lecturer in Palaeoecology at Queens, Belfast. As of the 14th February 2000 her new address will be: 
School of Archaeology and Palaeoecology 
Queens University of Belfast 
Malone Road 
Belfast 
BT7 1NN 
Email: N.Whitehouse@qub.ac.uk

Marina Ciaraldi has taken up the position of environmental archaeologist at Birmingham University Field Archaeology Unit (BUFAU). 

Wendy Smith will take up the post of English Heritage contract archaeobotanist at Southampton University in February 2000. 

Andy Fairbairn 
Is now at: Catalhoyuk Research Project, Dept. of Archaeology, Downing Street, Cambridge, Tel: 01670 531902, e-mail: andyfairbairn@hotmail.com. Home address: 45 Riverside Avenue, Guidepost, Choppington, Northumberland NE62 5PP. 

Simon Davis has moved to: 
Institut Português de Arqueologia 
Av. Da India 136 
P-1300 
Lisbon 
Portugal 


AEA SUBSCRIPTIONS PAYMENTS CO-ORDINATORS

Jan Bastians has offered to be the payment coordinator for Belgium. His address is: 

Jan Bastiaens 
University of Gent 
Department of Geography 
Laboratory for Palaeoecology and Landscape Genesis 
Krijgslaan 281/S8 
B-9000 Gent 
Belgium 
tel 00 32 9 2644704 
fax 00 32 9 2644985 
email: Jan.Bastiaens@rug.ac.be

Otto Brinkkemper will be the payment coordinator for the Netherlands. His address is: 
O. Brinkkemper 
Walgtsestraat 37 
4064 CK Varik 
giro number 44 18 738 

Many thanks to Jan and Otto for taking this on. 


NEWS FROM THE COMMITTEE

FUTURE AEA ANNUAL CONFERENCES

Change of Date & Request for Organisers for Easter 2002 
The date for AEA annual conferences has changed from Autumn to Easter. The AEA Committee would like to hold the 2002 Easter meeting on the European Continent and is looking for a suitable venue. The conference is normally a two or three day residential meeting, sometimes with additional field visits. Organisers are invited to choose symposium and session themes and should expect to produce conference proceedings (i.e. collate and edit a volume for publication) within a short time after the completion of the conference. Interested persons and institutions should contact Dr. Carol Palmer, Acting AEA Conference Officer, Department of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester, Leicestershire, LE1 7RH, United Kingdom. Telephone: +44 116 2522564, Fax: +44 116 2525005, E-mail: cp24@le.ac.uk 

AEA AGM & ELECTIONS

Part of this item is repeated from the August 1999 Newsletter in order to refresh peoples memories prior to the AGM: 
The Annual General Meeting for the AEA will be held during the Annual conference in Guildford 14-16th April. The exact time and venue will be announced in the conference programme. 

Draft agenda 
1. Committee's report 
2. Treasurer's report 
3. AEA Constitution 
4. Election of new committee members 
5. Any other business 

If there are any other items for the agenda would you please send them to Lisa Moffett as soon as possible. 

Accounts 
Details are given in a table on p. 17 of this Newsletter. 
Full details of the financial accounts will be available at the AGM. 
Rupert Housley, AEA Treasurer 
January 2000 

AEA Constitution 
The Committee proposes changes to the Constitution - please see Newsletter 65 (August 1999). 

Elections 
Elections for new members of the committee will be held at the AGM. The elected members of the committee currently are: Megan Brickley (98-01), Otto Brinkkemper (98-01), Sabine Karg (98-01), Jacqui Mulville (97-00), Terry O'Connor (97-00) and Wendy Smith (97-00). Glynis Jones and Julie Bond retire at the April AGM. Nominations are needed for three ordinary members of the committee and for Chair and Secretary. Nominations can be made by post, email or phone, to any member of the committee or to the Secretary, Lisa Moffett (address below). 

Some nominations have already been received and brief personal statements by the nominees appear in this newsletter. Further nominations, however, can be received up until the time of the AGM. It would be helpful if nominees would provide a brief statement about themselves which can be read at the AGM as an introduction to other AEA members who may not know them. 

If you cannot attend the AGM you can still vote by proxy (someone who is attending the meeting). All you have to do is give a signed statement appointing whoever you wish to be your proxy to any member of the committee at any time before the AGM. (And tell our proxy how you want them to vote!). If you wish, a member of the committee will act as your proxy. 

Lisa Moffett 
AEA Secretary 
Department of Ancient History and Archaeology 
University of Birmingham 
Edgbaston 
Birmingham  B15 2TT 
UNITED KINGDOM 
tel: 0121 414-5493 
email: l.c.moffett@bham.ac.uk

BIOGRAPHIES

Allan Hall
Allan [Hall] studied Botany at the University of Cambridge and undertook research into interglacial plant macrofossils and pollen with Prof, Richard West. Since 1977 he has been an English Heritage-funded Research Fellow in the Environmental Archaeology Unit at the University of York, where he has been responsible for contract work and research into plant remains from a wide variety of sites in England and elsewhere, but particularly urban deposits from York, Hull and Beverley. He has an especial interest in the problems of interpreting complex occupation deposits with waterlogged preservation, working closely with Harry Kenward to integrate evidence from plant and invertebrate macrofossils. He also maintains two large databases: the Environmental Archaeology Bibliography and the Archaeobotanical Computer Database. With Harry Kenward, he started and edited the AEA Newsletter, and with Harry, and later Terry O'Connor, founded and edited Circaea, the association's first bulletin, subsequently journal. He was Secretary of the AEA in 1992-5. Allan's spare time is largely devoted to two gardens and two allotments, all of which could benefit from more attention! 

Carol Palmer
Carol Palmer: I currently hold a Council for British Research in the Levant Post-doctoral Fellowship, based in the Department of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester. I did my first degree at the University of Durham, afterwards working at Maiden Castle and, after that, with Martin Jones, then at Durham University, on the plant remains from the site. I then moved to the University of Sheffield where I did the Master's in Environmental Archaeology and Palaeoeconomy followed by a PhD, completed in 1994. In between my Master's and starting my PhD, however, I conducted fieldwork in Jordan for two years, living in villages learning about farming and local society. The farming practices I studied, and the weeds found in farmers' fields, were the subject of my PhD research. Since completing my PhD, I have worked on a number of short-term contracts - lecturing at Bradford and Sheffield Universities and at Birzeit University (West Bank). I also worked as a research assistant to Marijke van der Veen analysing the results from her "wheat experiment" - a project partly funded by the AEA and in which many AEA members participated. In addition, I have analysed archaeobotanical remains from a range of sites from North Africa and Poland to Shetland. I continue to conduct fieldwork in the Near East and, for my fellowship research, have turned my attention to relationships between farmers and pastoralists - between growing crops and having herds. I am a member of Graeme Barker's Wadi Faynan, southern Jordan, landscape archaeology project where I am examining current and recent Bedouin and farmer activity. Also as part of my fellowship, I am also collaborating with ecologists from the Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature in Jordan studying the effects of domestic animal grazing on local vegetation. Among my recent publications are "Following the plough: the agricultural environment of northern Jordan" Levant 30 (1998): 129-65 and "Whose land is it anyway? An historical examination of land tenure and agriculture in northern Jordan" in C. Gosden and J. Hather (eds) (1999) The Prehistory of Food: appetites for change, pp. 288-305.  I have been a member of the AEA since 1986 and have published papers in volumes one and two of the AEA's journal, Environmental Archaeology. I was co-opted onto the AEA committee in September 1998 to serve as conference officer, a new office for the AEA. In this capacity, I act as a liaison person for conference organisers and am helping to regularise publication of AEA conference proceedings. The hard work of past conference organisers and Oxbow mean that the Durham, Bradford and Newcastle conference proceedings are, at the time of writing, well on their way to press. I have produced guidelines for future conference organisers and am looking for further exciting venues for meetings (ideas and offers from potential organisers welcome!). The AEA would like to organise more collaborative conferences, such as next spring's (2001) conference in Glasgow to be held jointly with NABO. Unfortunately, fieldwork commitments in Jordan mean that I am unable to attend this Easter's meeting. I wish you all a successful meeting, however, and am seeking election to the AEA committee as a regular member to enable me to continue in my role as conference officer. I hope to use my academic and professional experience to the best benefit of the AEA. 

Caroline Cartwright
Caroline Cartwright is the Environmental Archaeologist in the Department of Scientific Research at the British Museum. Her specialist areas of research include the archaeobotanical study of wood and charcoal as a tool for reconstructing the characteristics and use of past vegetational communities and she also focuses on the prehistoric use of marine resources such as fish and molluscs. At present Caroline is completing the identification and publication of a large part of the desiccated wood assemblage recovered from the Kenyon excavations of Middle Bronze Age tombs at Jericho. Caroline is also currently preparing for publication a reconstruction of the environmental resource base associated with Ra's al-Hadd, Oman in the Bronze and Iron Age periods. Continuing British Museum fieldwork projects include Tell es-Sa'idiyeh in Jordan, for which Caroline co-ordinates all the environmental and human skeletal specialist teamwork as well as contributing her own specialisms. 

Jan Bastiaens (geographer, archaeobotanist).
As a junior researcher (30 years) I work at the University of Gent (Belgium), in the department of geography, laboratory for palaeoecology and landscape genesis.  The laboratory is dealing with, among others, environmental archaeology (macrobotanical remains, wood and charcoal, pollen), firmly connected to historical geography and geomorphology. 
I myself am an archaeobotanist, investigating seeds from mainly Roman sites in Flanders (Belgium), in order to prepare a Ph.D.  Next to that I regularly do (post-)medieval material. 
Since I have been coopted as a commitee member at the last annual general meeting,  I now stand for election for a three years term.  The emphasis of my work within the AEA is and will be on 'foreign affairs', focusing on Belgium and its surroundings.  This will comprise promoting the AEA and its journal, encouraging authors, coordinating payments, .  And on the other side, the number of people working in environmental archaeology in Belgium is still rather low, but increasing.  So, the AEA can help in putting Belgium more and more on the map of environmental archaeology. 


AEA BOOKS

We have the following titles in stock: 

Dobney D, Jaques, S and Irving B 1996. Of Butchers and Breeds. Lincoln. £20.00 
Kenward H and Hall A 1995. Biological evidence from Anglo-Scandinavian Coppergate. Archaeology of York 14/7. York: CBA. £24.00 **** NOW AVAILABLE AT £15.00 (full price £32)**** 
Luff R and Rowley-Conwy, P. (eds) 1994. Whither Environmental Archaeology? Oxbow Monograph 38 (Symp. AEA 11) £21.50 
Moe D, Dickson J H and Jorgensen P M (eds) 1994. Garden History... £38.00 
Morris C and Rackham D (eds) 1992. Norse and later settlement and subsistence in the North Atlantic. Glasgow £15.00 **** NOW HALF-PRICE AT £7.50**** 
Moore P D, Webb, J A and Collinson M E 1997. Pollen analysis (paperback reprint of 2nd ed.) £24.50 
de Boe G and Verhaege F (eds.) 1997. Environment and subsistence in medieval Europe. Pre-printed papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997 Conference', Vol. 9. IAP Rapporten 9. Zellik. £10.00 
Mills, C. M. and Coles, G. (eds.) 1998. Life on the Edge. Oxbow (AEA Edinburgh conference volume). £20.00 
Bond, J. M. and O'Connor, T. P. 1999. Bones from medieval deposits at 16-22 Coppergate and other sites in York. Archaeology of York 15/5. York: CBA. £16.00 (no reduction: it isn't worth it when UK postage is £2.50!) 
Hall, A. R. and Kenward, H.K. 1990. Environmental evidence from the Colonia. Archaeology of York 14/6. London: CBA. **Excellent value at only £2.50!** (originally £18.00) 
Bartosiewicz, L., Van Neer, W. and Lentacker, A. (eds.). 1997. Draught Cattle: their osteological identification and history. Koninklijk Museum voor Midden-Afrika, Tervuren, België, Annalen Zoölogische Wetenschappen/Annales Sciences Zoologiques, Musée Royale de l'Afrique Centrale, Tervuren, Belgique. £12.00 

We also have copies of the first three STAR (Scottish Trust for Archaeology Research) Monographs from AOC (Scotland) Ltd.: 

... Point of Cott, Westray, Orkney (Barber, ed.), £17.50 
... Arran 1978-81 (Barber, ed.), £30.00 
... Lairg Project 1988-1996... (McCullagh and Tipping, eds), £35.00And, finally, there is a single copy of the following available at £20: 
Pedersen, L., Fischer, A. and Aaby, B. (1997). The Danish Storebælt since the Ice Age - man, sea and forest. Copenhagen. 

All titles are available from Dr Allan Hall, EAU, Department of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, York YO10 5YW. Please add £2.50 per order for UK destinations, and £4 per order for destinations outside the UK. Please make cheques payable to 'AEA'; we are sadly unable to handle credit card payments yet. 


AEA WEB PAGES

Members may like to know that the AEA has some web pages at 
http://www.york.ac.uk/inst/eau/aea 

They give information about the Association, including names, address and phone numbers of officer and of members of the committee, as well as details of the next AEA Conference, a page devoted to books available from the AEA, and a link to the web site for the journal Environmental Archaeology. Any additions, amendments or improvements will be gratefully received by me at biol8@york.ac.uk (note that, because of the lunacy of having an e-mail address which could be construed equally well as BIOL8 or BIO18, I have arranged that mailings to either address will work!). 

However, unless you are offering to take on the task of beautification yourself, please don't tell me that the pages are DULL. I know they are; they do now boast coloured backgrounds, but my aim initially was to make them quickly accessible and easily readable by even the slowest browsers. As technology has progressed, I perceive most people can cope with photographs without too much trouble. So I'll be delighted to try to amass some suitably environmental archaeological photographs (with captions or explanations and due credits) to brighten up what we have - send me files as e-mail attachments (and, if they are not yours, check that the owner is happy to have them sent). 

Dr Allan Hall, EAU, Department of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, York YO10 5YW 


CONFERENCES & MEETINGS

AEA CONFERENCE 
The Environmental Archaeology of Industry 
14th-16th April 2000, University of Surrey, Guildford. 

Organisers:  Patricia Wiltshire (UCL) and Peter Murphy (UEA) 

The environmental impacts of industry are obviously profound and far-reaching, yet in general they have been curiously neglected by environmental archaeologists.  This conference aims to bridge the gap between environmental and industrial archaeology.  The effects of mining on sedimentation and vegetation in river catchments have plainly been extensive; and from sedimentological, geochemical and palynological studies inferences about early mining are possible. The fuel-supplying infrastructure of industry, and its effects on vegetation and woodland management, will also be discussed.  Other raw materials for industrial production considered will include timber, horn, skins and shell. Papers on a suite of techniques based on chemistry, soil science and macrofossil studies will also be presented, all of which have a bearing on past industry. Results from a modern microbiological study will be used to assess problems that may have been encountered with carcass disposal in the past.  The effects of industrialisation on human health and prospects for characterising the occupations of individuals from skeletal features will be also be examined. The scope of the conference will be international, including papers presenting studies from Britain, Austria, Belgium, Greece, Egypt and Uganda. 

The programme of papers is now complete, but offers of posters are invited.  The programme will include: 

Friday 14th April 

Introduction:  Setting the scene 
Frank Chambers 

Proxy indicators of the environmental impacts of metallurgy: palynological and geoarchaeological approaches 

The use of Environmental Impact Models in Non-Ferrous Metal Mining History 
Geraint Coles, Mike Cressey and Gordon Cooke 
Reconstructing the environmental impact of past metallurgical activities 
P.D. Marshall 
Impacts of historic metal mining on the geoarchaeological landscape of the Yorkshire Dales 
A.J. Howard , K.A. Hudson Edwards and M.G. Macklin. 
The archaeology of tin mining on Dartmoor: a sediment-based approach 
V. Thorndycroft, D.Pirriet and A.G. Brown 
Geochemical evidence for atmospheric pollution close to the prehistoric copper mine at Copa Hill, Cwmystwyth, mid-Wales, U.K. 
T.M. Mighall, J.P. Grattan, J.P.Timberlake, and S. Forsyth. 

Fuel supplies and industry 

Wood charcoal and iron-working: a case study from Uganda 
Ruth Young and Gill Thompson 
Industrial fuels and their environmental impact in lowland Britain 
Rowena Gale 
The implication for the management of woodlands of the Romano-British iron production industry.  Creeton Quarry, Lincolnshire: a case study. 
Jane Cowgill 
History, archaeology and palaeoecology of the peat industry: a case study from the Humberhead levels, Eastern England. 
Nicki Whitehouse 

Biological raw materials and infrastructure 

Timber availability and woodworking techniques  in Lowland Britain. 
Richard Darrah 
Horn working and tannery at late Mediaeval Bruges: the environmental evidence 
Anton Ervynck  and Bieke Hillewaert 
Tawyers, tanners, horn trade and the mystery of the missing goat: zooarchaeological considerations 
Umberto Albarella 
Choice and use of shells for artefacts at Roman sites in the Eastern Desert of Egypt 
Sheila Hamilton-Dyer 

Saturday 15th April 

Proxy indicators of industry: Chemical, pedological and macrofossil approaches 

Organic Residues in Ancient Pottery and Archaeological Economies 
Richard P. Evershed 
Industrial activities - some suggested microstratigraphic signatures 
Richard Macphail 
"Fault" maps may be a better option! 
Robert Shiel 
Can we identify biological indicator groups for craft and industry? 
Allan Hall and Harry Kenward 
Saxon flax retting without pollution 
Mark Robinson and Patricia Wiltshire 
The taphonomy of arthropod remains 
Jaap Schelvis 
Charred mollusc shells as indicators of industrial activities 
Peter Murphy 

Impacts of industry on human populations 

The impact of industrialisation: an assessment of the morbidity and mortality of non-adults from medieval and post-medieval England, AD 850 - 1859. 
Mary Lewis 
Tinker, tailor, soldier .How can we tell the occupation of the dead? 
Tony Waldron 

Experimental approaches 

Microbial characteristics of soils from graves: an investigation at the interface of soil microbiology and archaeological science 
David Hopkins,  Patricia Wiltshire & Bryan Turner 

Concluding remarks 
Geraint Coles 

Sunday 16th April 
Field excursion on Sunday 16th April, visiting the Fishbourne Roman Palace and the Wealden and Downland Museum, Singleton, Sussex. 

A Booking Form for the conference will be found at the back of this newsletter.  Accommodation will be provided at the University of Surrey during the conference, and bed and breakfast will also be available at the University for the nights of 13th and 16th April.  Information on hotels and guest houses in Guildford will be provided for those preferring to make their own arrangements, but the Guildford Tourist Office (01483 444333) tell us that early booking is advised.  Please note that we need to be told about your dietary requirements and any other special needs. 

Costs for the field excursion depend partly on the size of the party, but for Fishbourne entrance should be £3.30 and for Singleton £4.20 (Full-time students £2.20).  Lunch and tea will be available.  Costs of transport will again depend on numbers attending, so please remember to indicate on the booking form whether you expect to come. 


JOINT CENTRE FOR PALAEOECOLOGY / ASSOCIATION FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY MEETING,
25TH OCTOBER 2000

In place of the original proposal for an Autumn Meeting of the AEA in York, a one-day meeting to coincide with the annual Research Forum of the University of York's Centre for Palaeoecology has been offered. The provisional date for this meeting is October 25th and the venue will be the Department of Archaeology, based at The King's Manor in central York (both date and venue to be confirmed in the next Newsletter). As usual for both these meetings, there is no particular theme and contributions of no more than 10-20 minutes on any topic in Environmental Archaeology are invited from all AEA Members. 
A further announcement will be made in the May Newsletter when bookings will be taken. 

To offer a contribution or check details of the meeting, please contact either 
Professor Terry O'Connor (Department of Archaeology, University of York, Kings Manor, YORK YO1 2EP, 
tel. +44 1904 433946, fax 433902, e-mail: tpoc1@york.ac.uk
or 
Dr Allan Hall, Environmental Archaeology Unit, Department of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, YORK YO10 5YW, tel. +44 1904 433851, fax 433850, e-mail: biol8@york.ac.uk


PROPOSAL FOR AN ARCHAEOBOTANY WORKGROUP MEETING, YORK, JULY 2000

Allan Hall would like to sound out archaeobotanical AEA Members with regard to the amount of interest there might be in holding a workgroup meeting in York in, say, the first two weeks of July 2000. As before, this would be an informal meeting providing an opportunity to exchange ideas and examine material - there must be a vast accumulation of 'unknowns' out there which has built up since the last meeting (which was too long ago to remember)! 

If you think you would be interested in attending such a meeting, please let Allan know, preferably before the end of March; it would be helpful if you could indicate whether a date between 3rd and 12th of July is convenient and what, if anything, you think we might take as a theme for the day. The only idea I have myself is that we might do something on the identification of mosses from archaeological deposits, but I am not wedded to it! 

Allan Hall, Environmental Archaeology Unit, Department of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, YORK YO10 5YW, tel. +44 1904 433851, fax: 433850, e-mail: biol8@york.ac.uk


12TH SYMPOSIUM OF THE INTERNATIONAL WORK GROUP FOR PALAEOETHNOBOTANY
Sheffield, UK 
17-23 June 2001 

We are pleased to invite you to the 12th IWGP symposium 

Local organisers 
Dr. Glynis Jones and Dr. Mike Charles - email: iwgp@sheffield.ac.uk (checked weekly) 

Consultative group 
Dr. A Butler, Dr. S. Colledge, Mr. D. Fuller, Dr. J. Greig, Dr. A. Hall, Prof. M. Jones, Ms. F. Mclaren, Ms. L. Moffett, Dr. D. de Moulin, Ms. Murray, Dr. M. Nesbitt, Dr. D. Samuel, Ms. V. Straker, Dr. M. van der Veen, Ms. A. Bogaard, Dr. C. Stevens, Dr. J. Thompson. 

Registration fee £50 

Themes:

There will be sections on particular themes as well as open sessions for contributions on any topic in archaeobotany.  The themed sections are as follows: 

Consumption: food, fodder and cuisine - The consumption of plants as food, drink, medicines, industrial raw materials and fodder; the status of both plants (luxuries, staples) and consumers (rank, gender, ethnicity). 

Collecting and cultivation - The gathering and cultivation of plants, the transition to and spread of farming, and the role of gathering in farming societies. 

Historical archaeobotany - The integration of documentary and archaeobotanical evidence; the archaeobotany of historical periods (e.g. Sumer, Rome, medieval Europe) and processes (e.g. Romanisation, urbanisation, the spread of Islam, European biological imperialism, long-distance trade). 

Analytical archaeobotany - Scales of analysis (context, household, site, region); qualitative v. quantitative analysis; integration of archaeobotanical and other archaeological evidence; levels of identification; ecological approaches and uniformitarianism. 

In addition to the lectures there will be laboratory demonstrations and poster sessions.  The languages of the conference will be English, French and German. 

Field excursion

The organisers are considering two possible field excursions.  Depending on the preferemces expressed by IWGP participants, one or both will be offered.  The two alternatives are as follows (both would take place on the Saturday): 

York

The opportunity to spend a day in York, one of England's most historic cities, which lies about 110 km (70 miles) NE of Sheffield. No formal arrangements will be made for visiting the huge variety of historic buildings and museums in York - conference participants will have a full day to explore the city and choose their own schedule.  Transport to York (by coach) will be provided and maps and other details will be available in advance. 

Peak District

A guided exploration of the landscape archaeology of the east moors of Derbyshire, focussing on Gardom's Edge (15 min coach ride from Sheffield, followed by a long walk), where upstanding evidence for settlement, agriculture and ceremonial activity can be traced from the Neolithic to the Iron Age. In the same area, participants will be able to explore the functional ecology of contrasting grassland habitats under the guidance of  a local ecologist. 

Accommodation

Two types of accomodation will be offered.  Most participants will be accomodated in Tapton Hall of Residence, University of Sheffield (5-10 min walk from the lecture theatre and next door to the University Botanical Garden).  Student self-catering accomodation will be available in various parts of Sheffield.  This accomodation is limited and cannot be offered to salaried participants except in particular cases of need. 

WEB site

Information regarding the symposium, travel, excursion locations etc. will be available on the IWGP web site - http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/A-C/ap/conf/iwgp/iwgpx.html - which will be updated as regularly as possible.  Copies of this announcement and the registration form are also available on the WEB site. 

A registration form is available at the back of this Newsletter. 


FINDS RESEARCH GROUP AD 700-1700
FORTHCOMING SEMINAR: FISH AND FISHING EQUIPMENT.
Monday 17th April, 2000 in The Music Room, Norwich Assembly House. 

The day will include papers on fish remains, fishing sites, a review of fishing equipment, evidence from Dublin, an Anglo-Saxon burial in Folkestone, jewellery made from fish parts and a scan through fish motifs and symbols. For further information contact: Ian Riddler, Canterbury Archaeological Trust, 92A Broad Street, Canterbury. CTI 2LU. Tel: 01227 462062. 

Finds Research Group AD700-1700. Annual subscription for membership is £3-00 (£5-00 overseas). Information can be obtained from Katey Banks, The Potteries Museum, Bethesda Street, Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent STI 3DW. Tel: 01782 202173 Fax: 01782 205033 


THE MANAGEMENT AND FUNCTION OF SEED REFERENCE COLLECTIONS

A workshop sponsored by the Institute of Archaeology, University College London; Centre for Economic Botany, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and Seed Conservation Department, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. To be held over one day, at the Institute of Archaeology, 27th March 2000. Organisers: Sue Colledge and Mary Anne Murray (UCL), Frances Cook, Claire Morgan and Mark Nesbitt (RBG Kew), John Dickie (Wakehurst Place, RBG Kew). Seed reference collections are widely used by archaeobotanists, quaternary botanists, agronomists and taxonomists. However, though germplasm uses of seeds are well documented, there has been little discussion of the management or function of seed reference collections for identification or the study of seed anatomy and morphology. This meeting aims to bring together those actively involved in curating or using seed reference collections to discuss three broad topics: 

Cataloguing and databases: current developments in cataloguing seed collections using databases. In what order do we organise our collections? Is there a standard format or core group of fields we should use? Can we use core fields from broader practice within botany (e.g. the Taxonomic Database Working Group)? What plans do we have to enable WWW access to databases? Should we create a central WWW homepage with links to seed reference collections? Other management issues: Storage: discussion of any variants on the plastic box/Bisley cabinet system that is most widely used. Imaging: still very memory hungry, and automated seed identification systems are still in their infancy. Have there been any successful or unsuccessful use of image storage systems amongst participants? Priorities in seed identification: What are the urgent needs for identification aids in temperate Old World seed identification? Dr John Dickie prompted this by asking what families or genera would be a high priority for any future work on seed anatomy in his laboratory at Wakehurst Place. 

Details have already been circulated to many of those in the UK actively involved in managing seed reference collections or working on new morphological/anatomical seed identification criteria. If you did not receive a circular and are interested in coming, please contact: Mark Nesbitt Centre for Economic Botany Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 3AE. Tel (direct): +44 (0)20 8332 5719. Fax: +44(0)20 8332 5768. Web: http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/ceb. Email: m.nesbitt@rbgkew.org.uk


COURSES & STUDENTSHIPS
 

DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM
POSTGRADUATE STUDY IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCES

The following Masters courses are offered within scientific areas: 

MSc in Palaeopathology (new course for 2000) 
MSc in Ancient Diet and Health (new course for 2000) 
MSc in Applied Chronometry 
MA in Conservation of Historic Objects (Archaeology) 
MA in Archaeological Survey 

For details and application forms, please contact: 
Sheila Brown 
Department of Archaeology 
University of Durham 
South Road 
Durham DH1 3LE 
Tel: 0191-374-3629 
Fax: 0191-374-3619 
Email: Sheila.Brown@Durham.ac.uk

Or for the individual courses: 
MSc Palaeopathology: Dr Charlotte Roberts (C.A.Roberts@Durham.ac.uk
MSc Diet and Disease: Dr Andrew Millard (A.R.Millard@Durham.ac.uk
MSc Applied Chronometry: Mr Ian Bailiff (Ian.Bailiff@Durham.ac.uk
MA Conservation Of Historic Objects (Arch.): Dr Chris Caple (Christopher.Caple@Durham.ac.uk
MA Archaeological Survey: Mr Phil Howard (Phil.Howard@Durham.ac.uk

DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM, U.K.
RESEARCH DEGREES

Applicants are also invited for research degrees within the Department. Note that deadlines for funding are looming for U.K. applicants and you are therefore advised to contact staff you may wish to do research with soon. For more details and application forms please contact Sheila Brown (as above), or see our website which includes Active Staff Research Interests: 
http://www.dur.ac.uk/archaeology/

DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM, U.K.
MSc IN PALAEOPATHOLOGY

A new masters taught course in Palaeopathology will be starting in October 2000 in the Department of Archaeology, University of Durham, England directed by Dr Charlotte Roberts. Dr Roberts has recently moved to the University of Durham from the University of Bradford and brings with her an extensive theoretical and practical knowledge for teaching palaeopathology, her main research interests also being in this area. The following provides an overview of the course. 

Aims and Objectives 
Because disease is very much part of our lives today, this course has, as its focus, health and disease in past populations from a world perspective. This course aims to equip students with the theoretical and practical knowledge of how to study disease in past skeletal populations, with the emphasis being on linking both biological and cultural contextual data, thereby encompassing a multidisciplinary approach. Using lecture, laboratory and tutorial sessions, and a range of assessment methods, the course will provide students with a range of skills necessary for the world of work and/or research. The emphasis, however, is on the practical element of the course. This intensive course thus offers a unique training unrivalled in the world for students wishing to gain skills for the analysis of skeletal remains from archaeological sites and/or to continue in research. 

Structure of the programme 
The MSc course is designed to provide students with the theoretical and practical knowledge necessary for the study of palaeopathology. Students take the equivalent of six modules over the year with modules 1-4 being completed by June of the year following registration. The modules are as follows: 

Module 1a : Research and study skills in archaeological science (15UCU) 
Module 1b : Research and study skills in palaeopathology (15UCU) 
Module 2 : Basic anatomy and osteology (30UCU) 
Module 3 : Methods and practice in palaeopathology (30UCU) 
Module 4 : Themes in palaeopathology (30UCU) 
Modules 5+6 : Dissertation (60UCU) 

If a student wishes to study part-time, Modules 1, 2 and 3 must be studied in the first year, and the dissertation completed in the second year. Module 4 can be taken in either year. Module 2 can be replaced with another module of the student's choice (and staff approval) if the applicant feels (and can prove) that they have the knowledge contained in this module (for example, North American students) 

The Department of Archaeology at Durham 

The Department of Archaeology at Durham was founded after WWII and has been teaching Honours degrees since 1974. It comprises around 20 academic staff with a range of backgrounds and, whilst the Department teaches courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels, it also excels in research, gaining a grade 5 (1 being poor and 5 being excellent) in the last research assessment exercise (1996). The Department moved to its current premises in 1997 and into newly refurbished accommodation, providing a range of excellent facilities for teaching and research. The accommodation consists of teaching space plus a drawing office, photographic studio and dark room, and environmental archaeology, luminescence dating, human skeletal analysis, conservation and computing laboratories. Students also have access to the Old Fulling Museum and Oriental Museum, both situated in Durham. The library has excellent holdings in archaeology, anthropology, and more specifically physical anthropology (including palaeopathology), and other major Departmental disciplines (e.g. history, classics, geology, geography, biology, chemistry). There are also research links with a number of other Departments within the University including Anthropology, Biology, Geography, Geology and History, and also with other universities both nationally and internationally. 

Entry Requirements 
We welcome students graduating with a good honours degree in an appropriate subject such as archaeology, anthropology, medicine, biology, genetics, history, classics, anatomy and other subjects. Alternatively, a candidate who satisfies the Graduate School Committee's requirements with other qualifications will also be considered. Overseas candidates must demonstrate proficiency in the English language at the appropriate standard. 

Applications for the course 
Information about applying for the MSc in Palaeopathology can be acquired from: 

Sheila Brown 
Department of Archaeology 
University of Durham 
South Road 
Durham DH1 3LE 
U.K. 
Email: Sheila.Brown@durham.ac.uk
Tel: 0191-374-3629; Fax: 0191-374-3619. Website: http://www.dur.ac.uk/archaeology/

Or for more informal enquiries please contact: 
Dr Charlotte Roberts (Tel:0191-374-1124; Email:C.A.Roberts@durham.ac.uk


PUBLICATIONS [ Books - Theses - Chapters - Articles ]

Many thanks to James Greig for the following information: 

James writes: "I am always delighted to receive references: greigjra@bham.ac.uk. Thanks to Umberto Albarella, Corrie Bakels, Christiane Jacquat, Manfred Rösch, Peter Warnock, Julian Wiethold for references." 

BOOKS

G. Bartoloni, G.C. Cianferoni and J.de Grossi Mazzorin (1997) Il complesso rurale de Campassini (Monteriggioni): considerazioni sull'alimentazione nell'Etruria settentrionale nell'VIII e VII secolo A.C. [The rural complex of Campassini, considerations of diet in northern Etruria in the 8th-7th centuries B.C.].  Olschke, Firenze, pp. 8-127. 

C. Becker, H. Manhart, J. Peters, et al. (1999) Historia animalium ex ossibus; Beiträge zur Paläoanatomie, Archäologie, Ägypologie, Ethnologie und Geschichte der Tiermedizin [Contributions on palaeoanatomy, archaeology, Egyptology, ethnology and veterinary history].  Leidorf, Rahden, Westfalen, 488 pp. Festschift for A.von den Driesch 

K.J. Edwards and J.P. Sadler (eds) (1999) Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings, 7)   Wiley, London, 640 pp. in Journal of Quaternary Science 14(6) 

M. Frie? (1999) Taille et conformation crânienne ches les hominidés de la fin du Pleistocène. (BAR, S799)   Archaeopress, Oxford 
R.M.van Heeringen and R.G.M. Lauwerier (1998) Sporen uit de IJzertijd en de Romeinse tijd in de Hoeksche Waard. Een aanvullend archeologisch onderzoek te Westmaas-Maaszicht, gem. Binnenmaas [Iron Age and Roman remains from te Hoeksche Waard, The Netherlands]. (Rapportage Archeologische Monumentenzorg, 50)   ROB, Amersfoort. 

R.M.van Heeringen, vam der Velde H.M. and I.van Amen (1998) Een tweeschepige huispattegrond en akkerland uit de Vroege Bronstijd te Noordwijk, Zuid-Holland [An early Bronze Age double aisled house platform from Noorwijk, Zuid-Holland, The Netherlands]. (Rapportage Archeologische Monumentenzorg, 55)   ROB, Amersfoort, Botanical material (I van Amen) pp 27-32 

P. Spikins (1999) Mesolithic northern England - environment, population and settlement. (BAR, 288)   Archaeopress, Oxford,  pp. ISBN 1 84171 006 7  £24 

THESES

F.M. Davies (1999) Holocene palaeoenvironmental studies in the Oban region of Scotland. Ph.D., Geography Dept, Newcastle-upon-Tyne university 

M.P. Richards (1998) Palaeodietary studies of European human populations using bone stable isotopes. D Phil, Oxford University 

CHAPTERS

M. Baillie (1999)  A view from the outside: recognising the big picture. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Procedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 625-637. 

J.C. Barrett (1999)  Rethinking the Bronze Age environment. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 493-500. 

A. Bietti (1997)  The transition to anatomically modern humans: the case of peninsular Italy. In G. A. Clarke and C. Willermet (eds.), Conceptual issues in modern human origins research.  Aldine de Gruyter, New York pp. 132-150. 

O. Brinkkemper and C. Vermeeren (1998)  Mediterrane rijst en oosterse kruidnagels. Botanisch onderzoek van twee beermonsters [Mediterranean rice and oriental cloves; archaeobotanical research on two cesspit samples]. In M. Barwasser and M. Smit (eds.), Acht eeuwen tussen twee stegen; archeologisch, historisch en bouwhistorische onderzoek in Kampen.  Stichting Archeologie IJssel/Vechtstreek, Kampen pp. 145-153. 

A.G. Brown (1999)  Characterising prehistoric lowland enviroments using local pollen asemblages. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 585-594. 

J. Buurman (1997)  Het middeleeuwse handelskwartier van Tiel [The medieval merchants' quarter in Tiel]. In H. Sarfatij (ed.), Archeologie in Tiel.  Rijkdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonerzoek, Amersfoort p. 5 pp. 

J. Buurman (1999)  Plant remains from an early medieval site at Schagen, the Netherlands. In H. Sarfatij, W. J. H. Verwers and P. J. Woltering (eds.), In discussion with the past.  SPA, ROB, Zwolle pp. 279-289. 

C.J. Caseldine (1999)  Archaeological and environmental change on prehistoric Dartmoor: current understanding and future directions. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 575-584. 

M.H. Dinnin and J.P. Sadler (1999)  10,000 years of change: the Holocene entomofauna of the British Isles. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 545-562. 

M. Doll (1999)  Tierknochen als Zeugnisse mittelalterlicher Gerberei in Reutlingen [Animal bone evidence for a medieval tannery in Reutlingen]. In W. Ströbele (ed.), Unter Putz und Pflasterstein.  Stadtverwaltung Reutlingen, Reutlingen pp. 123-125. 

M. Edmonds (1999)  Inhabiting Neolithic landscapes. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 485-492. 

K.J. Edwards (1999)  Palynology and people: observations on the British record. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 531-544. 

M. Evison (1999)  Perspectives on the Holocene in Britain: human DNA. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 615-624. 

L. Fontana (1999)  La faune du Magdalénien moyen de Canecaude (Aude). In D. Sacchi (ed.), Actes du 24e congrès préhistorique de France, 1994.  Société Préhistorique Française,  p. 288. 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin (1996)  Resti faunistici [Faunal remains]. In R. Volpe (ed.), Aqua Marcia; lo scavo di un tratto urbano.  Edizione All'Insegna del Giglio,  pp. 203-214. 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin (1997)  La fauna delle terramare nelle ricerche ottocentrsche [19th C studies of the fauna of Terramare]. In M. B. Brea, A. Cardarelli and M. Cremaschi (eds.), Le Terramare; la più antica civiltà Padana.  Electa,  pp. 87-89. 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin (1998)  Alcune osservazioni sulla fauna dell'abitato protoistorico de "Le Paludi" de Celano [Some observations on the fauna of the protohistoric settlement of "Le Paludi" at Celano]. In V. d'Ercole and R. Cairoli (eds.), Archeologia in Abruzzo; storia di un metanoditto tra industria e cultura.  Tarquinia (VT),  pp. 209-220. 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin and A. Riedel (1997)  La fauna delle Terramare. In M. B. Brea, A. Cardarelli and M. Cremaschi (eds.), Le Terramare; la più antica civiltà Padana.  Electa,  pp. 475-480. 

J.de Grosso Mazzorin and C. Minniti (1995)  I resti faunistici dell'insediamento di Quadrato di Torre Spaccata nel contesto delle economie di allevamento del neolitico finale ed eneolitico in Italia centrale [Faunal remains from the settlement of Quadrato di Torre Spaccata  in the context of stock rearing in Neolithic and Eneolithic central Italy]. In A. P. Anzidei and G. Carboni (eds.), L'insediamento preistorico di Quardato di Torre Spaccata (Roma) e osservazioni su alcuni aspetti tardo Neolitici ed Eneolitici dell'Italia centrale. (Origini, preistoria e protoistoria delle civiltà antiche 19) Bonsignori Editore,  pp. 287-295. 

D. Heinrich (1999a)  Die Fischreste von der Burg Bodenteich, Kr. Uelzen [The fish remains from the castle at Bodenteich, Uelzen, Germany]. In C. Becker, H. Manhart, J. Peters, et al. (eds.), Historia animalium ex ossibus.  Leidorf, Rahden, Westfalen pp. 181-187. 

D. Heinrich (1999b)  Some methodological considerations with regard to analyses of faunal history with special reference to fish remains. In N. Benecke (ed.), The Holocene history of the European vertebrate fauna; modern aspects of research. (Archäologie in Eurasien 6) Leidorf, Rahden pp. 163-170. 

D. Huddart, S. Gonzales and G. Roberts (1999)  The archaeological record and mid-Holocene marginal coastal palaeoenviroments around Liverpool Bay. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 563-574. 

B. Huntley (1999)  Climatic change and reconstruction. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 513-520. 

R.G.C.M. Lauwerier (1999)  A Bronze or Iron Age antler axe with a rectangular shafthole. In C. Becker, H. Manhart, J. Peters, et al. (eds.), Historia animalium ex ossibus.  Leidorf, Rahden/Westfalen pp. 225-228. 

M.G. Macklin (1999)  Holocene river enviroments in prehistoric Britain: human interaction and impact. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 521-530. 

S.J. Mithen (1999)  Mesolithic archaeology, environmental archaeology and human palaeoecology. In K. J. Edwards and J. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, London pp. 477-484. 

I.B.M. Ralston (1999)  The Iron Age: aspects of the human communities and their environments. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 501-512. 

M. Rösch (1999)  Ernährung und Umwelt im mittelalterlichen Villingen; botanische Untersuchungen an archäologischen Bodenbefunden [Food and environment in medieval Villingen; botanical results on archaeological finds]. In B. Jenisch (ed.), Die Entstehung der Stadt Villingen. (Forschungen und Berichte der Archäologie des Mittelalters in Baden-Württemberg 22) Theiss, Stuttgart pp. 365-573. (ISBN 3 8062 1301 1) 

M. Rösch and E. Fischer (1999)  Pflanzenreste aus einer Lehmwand; Dokumente von Landwirtschaft und Ernährung im 14. Jahrhundert [Plant remains from a daub wall; evidence of agriculture and food in the 14th C]. In W. Ströbele (ed.), Unter Putz und Pflasterstein; Bauforschung und Mittelalterarchäologie in Reutlingen zum Beispiel Pfäfflinhofstrasse 4.  Stadtverwaltung Reutlingen, Reutlingen pp. 126-184. (ISBN 3 927228 80 X) 

E.M. Somerville (1999)  Some aspects of the palaeoecology of commensals. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 605-614. 

U. Thannheiser (1997)  Botanische Funde. In S. Hiller and V. Nikolov (eds.), Karanovo, die Ausgrabungen im Südsektor 1984-1992. (Österreichisch-bulgarischen Ausgrabungen und Forschungen in Karanovo 1), Salzburg, Sofia pp. 429-464, 465-480. 

G. Whittington and K.J. Edwards (1999)  Landscape scale soil pollen analysis. In K. J. Edwards and J. P. Sadler (eds.), Holocene environments of prehistoric Britain. (Quaternary Proceedings 7) Wiley, Chichester pp. 595-604. 

J. Wiethold (1999a)  Les macro-restes vegetaux. In O. Buchsenschutz and J.-P. Guillaumet (eds.), Les ramparts de Bibracte. Recherches recentes sur la Porte de Rebout et le trace des fortifications. (Centre archéologique européen de Mont Beuvray. Collection Bibracte 3), Glux-en-Glenne pp. 217-219. (charred plant remains) 

J. Wiethold (1999b)  Welchen Beitrag liefern Paläoökologische Untersuchungen zu langfristigen ökologischen Untersuchungsprogrammen? Das Beispiel Belauer See, Kr. Plön, Schleswig-Holstein: die jungere postglaziale Vegetationsgeschichte [How can palaeoecological studies contribute to recent long-term ecosystem investigation programmes? The example from Belauersee. The vegation history of the later Holocene]. In W. Schäfer (ed.), Integriertes Monitoring - Ergebnisse, Programme, Konzepte, Ekosysteme. (Beiträge zur Ökosystemforschung 7), Kiel pp. 3-16. (pollen) 

W.van Zeist (1999)  Cultivated and wild fruits and nuts in 14th to early 19th century Groningen. In H. Sartatij (ed.), In discussion with the past.  ROB, Zwolle, Amersfoort pp. 301-307. 

ARTICLES

U. Albarella (1999) 'The mystery of husbandry': medieval animals and the problem of integrating historical and archaeological evidence. Antiquity 73(282): 867-875 

E.A. Allison, A.R. Hall and H. Kenward (1999) Technical report: the living conditions and resources exploited at the early christian rath at Deer Park Farm, Co Antrim, Northern Ireland, evidence from plants and invertebrates, parts 1 and 2. York Environmental Archaeology Unit Report 99/8, 99/10: 

A. Alvrus (1999) Fracture patterns among the Nubians of Semna South, Sudanese Nubia. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 417-429 

D.E. Anderson (1998) A reconstruction of Holocene climatic changes from peat bogs in northwest Scotland. Boreas 27: 208-224 

J-L. Araus, A. Febrero, R. Buxo, et al. (1997) Changes in carbon isotope discrimination in cereal grains from different regions of the western Mediterranean basin during the past 7 millennia. Palaeoenvironmental evidence of a differential change in aridity. Global Change Biology 3: 107-118 

N. Armentato, A. Malgosa and D. Campillo (1999) A case of frontal sinusitis from the Bronze Age site of Can Filuà (Barcelona). International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 438-442 

J. Arneborg, J. Heieman, N. Lynerup, et al. (1999) Change of diet of the Greenland Vikings determined from stable carbon isotope analysis and radiocarbon dating of their bones. Radiocarbon 42(2): 157-168 

P. Ashmore, B.A. Brayshaw, K.J. Edwards, et al. (2000) Allochthonous and autochthonous mire deposits, slope instability and palaeoenvironmental investigation in the Borve valley, Barra, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. The Holocene 10(1): 97-108 

C.C. Bakels (1996) Growing grain for others, or how to detect surplus production? Journal of European Archaeology 4: 329-336 

C.C. Bakels (1998) Fruits and seeds from the Iron Age settlements at Oss-Ussen. Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 30: 337-367 

W.-D. Becker, K.-H. Knörzer and J. Meurers-Balke (1997) Archäobotanische Untersuchungen. Kölner Jahrbücher 30: 397-404 

W.-D. Becker and U. Tegtmeier (1998) Datteln, Feigen, Mandeln, Nüsse - Südfrüchte aus dem römischen Xanten [Dates, figs, almonds, walnuts - southern fruits from Roman Xanten]. Archäologie im Rheinland 1997: 188-191 

H. Behling and M. Street (1999) Palaeoecological studies at the Mesolithic site at Bedburg-Königshoven near Cologne, Germany. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 8(4): 273-285 

K.-E. Behre (1999) Vegetationsgeschichte und Paläoökologie - ihre Beiträge zum Verständnis der heutigen Vegetation [Vegetation history and palaeoecology, their contribution to the understanding of modern vegetation]. Berichte der Reinhold-Tüxen-Gesellschaft 11: 245-266 (English summary) 

R. Benus, S. Masnicová and J. Lietava (1999) Intentional cranial vault deformation in a Slavonic population from the medieval cemetery in Devín (Slovakia). International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 267-270 

P. Birocheau, F. Convertini, J.P. Cros, et al. (1999) Fossé et sépultures du néolithique récent aux Châtelliers du Vieil-Auzay (Vendée); aspects structureaux et anthropologiques [Late Neolithic ditch and burials at Châtelliers du Vieil-Auzay; structural and anthropological aspects]. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française 96(3): 375-390 (Neolithic skeletal injuries) 

N. Blazauskas, D. Kisielene, V. Kucinskaite, et al. (1998) Late Glacial and Holocene sedimentary environment in the region of the Ula River. Geologija/Geology 25: 20-30 (pollen, diatoms, plant macrofossils, from Lithuania) 

Z.M. Bochenski, K. Huhtala, S. Sulkava, et al. (1999) Fragmentation and preservation of bird bones in food remains of the Golden Eagle (Aquila chrysaetos). Archaeofauna 8: 31-39 

S. Braguier (1999a) Etude de la faune neolithique de l'enceinte de Temps-Perdu à Migné-Auxances (Vienne) [Neolithic fauna from the enclosure at Temps-Perdu, Migné-Auxanc]. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française 96(3): 363-365 

S. Braguier (1999b) La faune du Rocher à Villedoux (Charente-Maritime) et de Champ-Durand à Nieul-su-l'Autize (Vendée). Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française 96(3): 409-418 

D.R. Bridgland, M.H. Field, J.H. Holmes, et al. (1999) Middle Pleistocene interglacial Thames-Medway deposits at Clacton-on-Sea, England: reconsideration of the biostratigraphical and environmental context of the type Clactonian Palaeolithic industry. Quaternary Science Reviews 18: 109-146 

M.M. Bryden, S. O'Connor and R. Jones (1999) Archaeological evidence for the extinction of a breeding population of elephant seals in Tasmania in prehistoric times. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 430-437 

J. Buurman (1999a) Archaeobotanical investigations of a middle and late Bronze Age settlement site at Westwoud (West-Friesland). Berichten van de Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek 43: 99-139 

A. Buzhilova (1999) Medieval examples of syphilis from European Russia. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 271-276 

L. Capasso (1999) Brucellosis at Herculaneum (79 AD). International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 277-288 

P.V. Castro, R.W. Chapman, S. Gili, et al. (1999) Agricultural production and social change in the Bronze Age of SE Spain: the Gatas project. Antiquity 73(282): 846-856 

R. Coard (1999) One bone, 2 bones, wet bones, dry bones - transport potentials under experimental conditions. Journal of Archaeological Science  26(11): 1369-1375 

L. Costatini (1998) The origin of the Mediterranean diet in Italy. Rivista di Anthropologia 76: 7-15 

A. Cucina, M. Lucci, R. Vargiu, et al. (1999) Dental evidence of biological affinity and environmental conditions in prehistoric Trentino (Italy), samples from the Neolithic to the early Bronze Age. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 404-416 

B. Dechert, E. Stephan and H.-P. Uerpmann (1999) Horses from Pleistocene sites in the Rhineland, Germany. Archaeofauna 8: 159-167 

S.N. Dudd, R.P. Evershed and R.P. Gibson (1999) Evidence for varying patterns of exploitation of animal products in different prehistoric potery traditions based on lipids present in surface and absorbed residues. Journal of Archaeological Science  26(12): 1473-1482 

R. Ebersbach (1999) Modelling Neolithic agriculture and stock farming at Swiss lake shore settlements - evidence from historical and ethnographical data. Archaeofauna 8: 115-122 

I.B. Enghoff (1999) Fishing in the Baltic from the 5th century B.C. to the 16th century A.D; evidence from fish bones. Archaeofauna 8: 41-85 

R.P. Evershed et al. (1997) New criteria for the identification of animal fats in archaeological pottery. Naturwissenschaften 84: 402-406 

P.M. Goldberg (1999) Statistical comparison of the osteology of southwestern Columbidae. Journal of Archaeological Science  26(12): 1459-1471 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin (1998b) IV Roma. Saggio de scavo nell'aula di "S. Isidore in Thermis"[Sample from the excavation of the theatre of S. Isidoro in Thermis]. Notizie degli Scavi de Anthichità 7/8: 365-425 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin and A.M. Frezza (1998) Analisi preliminare dell'ittiofauna dell'insediamento dell'età del Bronzo di Canàr [Preliminary analysis of the fish fauna from the Bronze Age settlement of Canàr]. Padusa Quaderni 2: 181-188 (in Canàr di San Pierto Polesine; richerche archeo-ambientali sul sito palafitticolo) 

J.de Grossi Mazzorin and A. Tagliacozzo (1998) Human diet of animal origin in Italy between the Palaeolithic and the Metal Age in light of archaeozoological data. Rivista di Antropologia 76: 85-93 

K.de Grossi Mazzorin and C. Minniti (1996) I resti faunistici dell'insediamento di Quadrato di Torre Spaccata nel contesto delle economie di allevamento del Neolitico finale ed Eneolitico in Italia centrale. Origini 19: 287-295 

D. Heinrich (1996) Die Faunareste von Schleswig und anderer mittelalterlicher Siedlungsplätze Schleswig-Holsteins; eine vergleichende Betrachtung [The faunal remains from Schleswig and other medieval settlements in Schleswig-Holstein; a comparative study]. Offa 53: 327-370 (appeared 1999) 

J. Higgins (1999) Túncl: a case study of avian zooarchaeology and taphonomy. Journal of Archaeological Science  26(12): 1149-1157 

R. Highfield (1999) Lamb and cocktails at farewell to king Midas. The Daily Telegraph, December 23rd 1999: 5 (molecular biology at tomb in Turkey; web link www.upenn.edu/museum) 

J.G. Hodgson, P. Halstead, P.J. Wilson, et al. (1999) Functional interpretation of archaeobotanical data: making hay in the archaeological record. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 8(4): 261-271 

V. Hoffmann and J. Wiethold (1999) Pasewalks brennend interessante Geschichte. Archäologische und archäobotanische Untersuchungen in Pasewalk [The burnin interest of Pasewalk's history, archaeological and archaeobotanical research there]. Archäologische Berichte aus Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 6: 84-100 (charred plant remains) 

A.J. Howard, M.D. Bateman, D. Garton, et al. (1999) Evidence of late Devensian and erly Flandrian processes and environments in the Idle valley at Tiln, north Nottinghamshire. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society 52(4): 383-393 

R.M. Jacobi, P.J. Rowe, M.A. Gilmour, et al. (1998) Radiometric dating of the Middle Palaeolithic tool industry and associated fauna of Pin Hole Cave, Creswell Crags, England. Journal of Quaternary Science 13(1): 29-42 

C. Jacquat (1998) L'exemple des végétaux [the example of plants]. Série Documentair des Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève 33: 60-66 

M. Kabailiene and M. Grigiene (1997) Vegetation and signs of human economic activities in the environs of Lake Kretuonas during middle and late Holocene. Geologija/Geology 21: 44-52 (geology, geomorphology, pollen, Lithuania) 

M. Kabailiene, M. Stancikaite and T. Ostrauskas (1997) Living conditions and activity of man in the environs of Lake Gruda in the end of the Late Glacial and Holocene. Geologija/Geology 21: 32-42 (archaeology, pollen, diatoms, in Lithuania) 

H. Kenward, F. Large and J. Carrott (1998) The archaeological significance of insects and other invertebrate remains from Keay's and Law's Lanes, the Lanes, Carlisle, technical report. York Environmental Archaeology Unit Report 98/32: 

K.-H. Knörzer (1998) Botanische Untersuchungen am bandkeramischen Brunnen von Erkelenz/Kückhoven. Materialhefte zur Bodendenkmalpflege im Rheinland 11: 229-246 

C.V. Kremenetski, O.A. Chichagova and N.I. Shishlina (1999) Palaeoecological evidence for Holocene vegetation, climate and land use change in the lower Don basin and Kalmuk area, southern Russia. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 8(4): 233-246 

K. Kuman, M. Inbar and R.J. Clarke (1999) Palaeoevironment and cultural sequence of the Florisbad mid stone age hominid site in South Africa. Journal of Archaeological Science  26(11): 1409-1425 

M. Latalowa, J. Jarosinska and M. Badura (1998) Elblag sredniowieczny w swietle dotychczasowych materialow archeobotanicznych [Medieval Elblag in the light of present archaeobotanical material]. Archaeologia Polski 43: 147-166 

R.G.C.M. Lauwerier (1998) Paarden in de Romeinse tijd in Nederland [Horses in the Roman period in the Netherlands]. Westerheem 47(1): 9-27 

R.G.C.M. Lauwerier (1999) Eating horsemeat: the evidence in the Roman Netherlands. Archaeofauna 8: 101-113 

R.G.C.M. Lauwerier, B.J. Groenewoudt, O. Brinkkemper, et al. (1999) Between ritual and economics: animals and plants in a 4th century native settlement at Heeten, the Netherlands. Berichten van de Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek 43: 155-198 

R.G.C.M. Lauwerier and g IJzereef (1998) Livestock and meat from the Iron Age and Roman period settlements at Oss-Ussen (800 BC - AD 250). Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 30: 349-367 

R.G.C.M. Lauwerier and F.J. Laarman (1996) Slachtafval en haute cuisine; bot uit een beerput van het kasteel van Valkenisse (begin 15de eeuw) [Butchers' waste and haute cuisine; bone from a rubbish pit at early 15th C Valkenisse castle]. Nehalennia 108: 8-11 

A. Lentacker and A. Ervynck (1999) The archaeofauna of the late medieval Islamic harbour town of Saltés (Huelva, Spain). Archaeofauna 8: 141-157 

P. Lingström and H. Borrman (1999) Distribution of dental caries in an early 17th century Swedish population with special reference to diet. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 395-403 

I. Lütjens and J. Wiethold (1999) Vegetationsgeschichte und archäologische Untersuchungen zur Besiedlung des Bornhöveder Seengebiete im Neolithikum [Palynological and archaeological studies of settlement history in the area of the Bornhöveder lake district in the Neolithic]. Archäologische Nachrichten aus Schleswig-Holstein 9: 30-67 (pollen) 

M.G. Macklin, C. Bonsall, F.M. Davies, et al. (2000) Human-environmental interactions during the Holocene. New data and interpretations from the Oban area, Scotland. The Holocene 10(1): 109-121 (pollen, transect, altitude) 

E. Mäkelä and H. Hyvärinen (2000) Holocene vegetation history at Vätsäri Inari, Lapland, northeast Finland with special reference to Betula. The Holocene 10(1): 75-85 

D. Magri (1999) Late Quaternary vegetation history at Lagaccione, near Lago di Bolsano (central Italy). Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 106: 171-208 

D. Magri and L. Sadori (1999) Late Pleistocene and Holocene pollen stratigraphy at Lago di Vico, central Italy. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 8(4): 247-260 

V. Matterne, J.-H. Yvinen, D. Gemehl, et al. (1998) Stockage des plantes alimentaires et infestations par les insectes dans un grenier incendié de la fin du 2e siècle après J-C à Amiens (Somme) [Storage of food plants and insect infestation in a burnt granary from the 2nd century A.D.]. Revue archéologique de Picardie 3/4: 93-122 

M. Mednikova (1999) Pathological changes on two female radial bones of the early Iron Age from southern Iberia. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 379-382 

T.P. O'Connor (1999) Review of Reitz & Wing (good) and Claasen (bad). Antiquity 73(282): 964-966 

E. Panagiatakopulu and P. Buckland (1999) Cimex lenticularius L. the common bed bug from Pharaonic Egypt. Antiquity 73(282): 908-911 

L. Peña Chocorro and L. Zapata Peña (1998) Higos, ciruelquas y nueces: aportación de la arqueobotánica al estudio del mundo romano [Figs, plums and walnuts, the contribution of archaeobotany to the study of the Roman world]. Donostia 9: 679-690 

H.H. Plogmann and A. Rehazek (1999) 1000 years (6th-16th century) of economic life in the heart of Europe. Common and distinct trends in cattle economy of the Baltic Sea region and the Swiss region of the Alpine Forelands. Archaeofauna 8: 123-133 

A. Ramrath, L. Sadori and J.F.W. Negendank (2000) Sediments from Lago di Mezzano, central Italy: a record of late glacial / Holocene climatic variations and anthropogenic activity. The Holocene 10(1): 

B. Reale, D. Marchi and S.M. Borgognini Tarli (1999) A case of diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) from a medieval necropolis in southern Italy. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 369-373 

M.P. Richards and R.E.M. Hedges (1999) A Neolithic revolution - new evidence of diet in the British Neolithic. Antiquity 73(282): 891-897 

M. Rösch (1998a) Gerste (barley). Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde 11: 453-455 

M. Rösch (1998b) Gespinstpflanzen [fibre plants]. Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde 11: 557-558 

M. Rösch (1998c) Getreide. Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde 12: 4-11 

M. Rösch (1999b) Hafer [oats]. Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde 13: 322-324 

M. Rösch (1999c) Hanf [hemp]. Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde 13: 628-631 

M. Rösch and E. Fischer (1999a) Denkmalpflege, Hausforschung und Archäobotanik; Pflanzen in Lehmstrukturen historischer Gebäude als Dokumente früheren Lebens [Ancient monument protection, house research and archaeobotany; plants in daub from historic buildings as evidence of past life]. Denkmalpflege in Baden-Württemberg; Nachrichtblatt des Landesdenkmalalmtes 2/1999: 76-84 

A. Ross and R. Duffy (2000) A fine mesh screening of midden material and the recovery of fish bones - the development of flotation and deflocculation techniqyes for an effieient and effective procedure. Geoarchaeology 15(1): 21-41 

J. Schelvis (1994) Caught between the teetch. A review of Dutch finds of archaeological remains of ectoparasites in combs. Proceedings of the Section Experimental and Applied Entomology of the Netherlands 5: 131-132 

J. Schibler and K.-H. Steppan (1999) Human impact on the habitat of large herbivores in eastern Switzerland and southwest Germany in the Neolithic. Archaeofauna 8: 87-99 

P.W. Stahl (1999) Structural density of domesticated South American camelid skeletal elements and the archaeological investigation of Andean Ch'arki. Journal of Archaeological Science  26(11): 1347-1368 

M.C. Stiner (1999) Palaeolithic mollusc exploitation at Riparo Mochi (Balzi Rossi, Italy): food and ornaments from the Aurignacian through Epigravettian. Antiquity 73(282): 735-754 

M.C. Stiner, N.D. Munro, T.A. Surovell, et al. (1999) Palaeolithic population growth pulses evidenced by small game use. Science 283: 190-194 

B. Stopp (1999) How to fill a pit: examples from the late Iron Age settlement of Basel-Gasfabrik (Switzerland). Archaeofauna 8: 135-139 

S. Sugita, M.-J. Gallard and A. Broström (1999) Landscape openness and pollen records: a simulation approach. The Holocene 9(4): 409-421 

J.F. Terral (1996) Wild and cultivated olive (Olea europaea L.): a new approach to an old problem using inorganic analysis of modern wood and archaeological charcoal. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 91: 383-397 

F. Valentin, E. Herrscher and B.-Y. Mafart (1999) Rhinomaxillary changes in a New-Caledonian cranium: palaeopathological differential diagnosis. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 374-378 

L. Vyhnánek, E. Strouhal and A. Nemecková (1999) "Kissing" osteochondroma: a case from ancient Egypt. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(5): 361-368 

M.P. Waller, A.J. Long, D. Long, et al. (1999) Patterns and processes in the development of coastal mire vegetation: multi-site investigations from Walland Marsh, southeast England. Quaternary Science Reviews 18: 1419-1444 

P. Warnock (1998) From plant domestication to phytolith interpretation: the history of palaeoethnobotany in the Near East. Near Eastern Archaeology 61(4): 238-252 

I. Wiechmann, E. Brandt and G. Grupe (1999) State of preservation of polymorphic plasma proteins recovered from ancient human bones. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 383-394 


AEA ACCOUNTS compiled to 31 December 1999
 
 
 

. 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
Assets at start of year          
Bank account balances 7909.53  8458.08  12,535.09  9156.84  6396.44 
Cash 12.02  12.02  10.46  6.40  19.40 
.          
Income:          
Subscriptions 4905.95  4550.50  5932.00  6096.00  5764.00 
Books, inc. Journal back nos. 1764.80  2006.82  1242.39  1429.25  961.98 
Interest (minus bank/credit card charges) 266.72  358.11  186.11  306.08  46.31 
Meetings, NL flyers 67.78  527.25  20.00 
Misc. (donations, grants) 15.00  1000.00  40.00 
income subtotal 6952.47  6983.21  8887.75  7831.33  6832.29 
Initial assets and income, excluding books in stock 14,874.02  15,453.31  21,433.30  16,994.57  13,248.13 
.          
Expenditure:          
Office, stationery 365.59  156.49  174.86  66.00  64.53 
IFA poster space and display boards 1978.65 
Committee, membership leaflet 25.50  67.50  5.00  332.40 
CBA & Data Protection fee 48.00  48.00  125.00  50.00  50.00 
Grants & Conference loans 100.00  300.00  808.00 
Newsletter production & postage 1398.54  1387.77  1189.07  1101.80  1234.75 
Journal production & postage 1184.11 
(Circaea 11:1) 
10,311.80 
(Circaea 11:2, 12:1) 
8709.93 
(Circaea 12:2, EA1, EA2) 
3692.00 
(EA3) 
Books 1303.53  948.00  470.87  651.00  922.00 
subtotal expenditure 6403.92  2907.76  12,276.60  10,578.73  7103.68 
.          
Assets at end of year:          
Bank accounts 8458.08  12,535.09  9156.84  6396.44  6124.08 
Cash 12.02  10.46  6.40  19.40  20.37 
Expenditure and final assets, excluding books in stock: 8470.10  12,545.55  9163.24  6415.84  6144.45 

 AEA CONFERENCE BOOKING FORM

'THE ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF INDUSTRY'

Conference fee: £30 (£15 - student/unwaged/retired)     .......... 
Thursday 13th April 
Bed and breakfast (£27.50)         .......... 
Friday 14th April 
Coffee, lunch and tea (£23.03)        .......... 
Wine reception and Conference Dinner (£22.74)      .......... 
Bed and breakfast (£27.50), or        .......... 
24 hour package, including all above (£62.45)      .......... 
Saturday 15th April 
Coffee, lunch and tea (£23.03)        .......... 
Dinner (£11.34)          .......... 
Bed and breakfast (£27.50), or        .......... 
24 hour package, including all above (£51.05)      .......... 
Sunday 16th April 
Bed and breakfast (£27.50)         .......... 

Total            .......... 

Any special dietary requirements?     ............................................. 

Name: 
Address: 
 

Please make cheques payable to AEA Conference Account (1999) and send to Peter Murphy, Centre of East Anglian Studies, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK. 

The cost of the field excursion (Sunday 16th April) will depend on the numbers attending.  Please indicate whether you intend to come, so we can book suitable transport. 

I will/will not be attending the Field Excursion on 16th April. 
 

I would like to offer a poster entitled..................................................................................... 


12th Symposium of the International Work Group for Palaeoethnobotany
Sheffield, U.K. 17-23 June 2001 

http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/A-C/ap/conf/iwgp/iwgpx.html

PARTICIPANT INFORMATION 
Surname  Title 
First Name  Email 
Address  Fax 
  Telephone 
 

REGISTRATION 
I would like to attend the IWGP conference 
I/we would like to give a presentation 

Name(s) Title of Presentation (in language of presentation - English, French or German) 
 
 
 

Preferred form of presentation (please tick1) paper  poster 
1 depending on the number offered, you may be asked to give your presentation in a different form. 

Preferred section (if any2) 
Consumption: food, fodder and cuisine   Collecting and cultivation 

Historical archaeobotany   Analytical archaeobotany 
2 presentations not fitting into any of the above sections can be included in the open sessions 

ACCOMMODATION/MEALS 

Please indicate the meals and accommodation you would like to reserve (please tick each day the service is required) 

Service Daily cost sun 

(17) mon 
(18) tues 
(19) wed 
(20) thur 
(21) fri 
(22) sat 
(23) 

Bed & Breakfast with bathroom £33.40 
Bed & Breakfast standard £21.75 
Dinner, Bed & Breakfast with bathroom £43.60 
Dinner, Bed & Breakfast standard £31.95 
Student self-catering ca £7.50 
Lunch - buffet service £8.68 
Lunch - packed lunch £5.20 

All rooms are single except for a very small number of double rooms (with bath) at the same cost per person, available for participants with partners; please give partner's name if you would prefer a double room 

limited to registered students and cases of particular need  5 estimate based on current costs 

Special dietary requirements (vegetarian, vegan etc.) 
Other special requirements (transport etc.) 

EXCURSION 
Please indicate which of the two possible excursions you would prefer Peak District  York 

I will not be joining the excursion 

Forms to be returned by 31 March 2000 
To: IWGP, Dept. Archaeology & Prehistory, University of Sheffield, 
Northgate House, West Street, Sheffield, S1 4ET, U.K.

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