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Newsletter 67 (February 2000) ISSN 1363-6553Submit 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 |
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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. 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! ERRATUM: MEMBERSHIP INTERESTS LIST Our apologies to Greig Campbell for leaving him out of the 1999 Membership
Interests List. His details are as follows: 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: 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 Simon Davis has moved to: AEA SUBSCRIPTIONS PAYMENTS CO-ORDINATORS Jan Bastians has offered to be the payment coordinator for Belgium. His address is: Jan Bastiaens Otto Brinkkemper will be the payment coordinator for the Netherlands.
His address is: 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 AEA AGM & ELECTIONS Part of this item is repeated from the August 1999 Newsletter in order
to refresh peoples memories prior to the AGM: Draft agenda If there are any other items for the agenda would you please send them to Lisa Moffett as soon as possible. Accounts AEA Constitution Elections 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 BIOGRAPHIES Allan Hall Carol Palmer Caroline Cartwright Jan Bastiaens (geographer, archaeobotanist). AEA BOOKS We have the following titles in stock: Dobney D, Jaques, S and Irving B 1996. Of Butchers and Breeds. Lincoln.
£20.00 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
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 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 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 Proxy indicators of the environmental impacts of metallurgy: palynological and geoarchaeological approaches The use of Environmental Impact Models in Non-Ferrous Metal Mining History
Fuel supplies and industry Wood charcoal and iron-working: a case study from Uganda Biological raw materials and infrastructure Timber availability and woodworking techniques in Lowland Britain.
Saturday 15th April Proxy indicators of industry: Chemical, pedological and macrofossil approaches Organic Residues in Ancient Pottery and Archaeological Economies
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.
Experimental approaches Microbial characteristics of soils from graves: an investigation at the
interface of soil microbiology and archaeological science Concluding remarks Sunday 16th April 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, 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. To offer a contribution or check details of the meeting, please contact
either 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
We are pleased to invite you to the 12th IWGP symposium Local organisers Consultative group 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 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 The following Masters courses are offered within scientific areas: MSc in Palaeopathology (new course for 2000) For details and application forms, please contact: Or for the individual courses: DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM, U.K. 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:
DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM, U.K. 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 Structure of the programme Module 1a : Research and study skills in archaeological science (15UCU)
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 Applications for the course Sheila Brown Or for more informal enquiries please contact: 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, 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. 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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. 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Journal of Osteoarchaeology 9(6): 383-394 AEA ACCOUNTS compiled to 31 December 1999
'THE ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF INDUSTRY' Conference fee: £30 (£15 - student/unwaged/retired)
.......... Total .......... Any special dietary requirements? ............................................. Name: 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
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