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Newsletter 78 November 2002 ISSN 1363-6553Submit information to the newsletter Editorial Change of Address News from the Committee The Holocene Conferences & Meetings Palaeopathology Course Advertisement The Murphy Collection Publications Forms |
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Edited by Wendy Carruthers and Vanessa Straker Copy dates for Newsletter: 20th of the following months - January / April / July / October. Items for the Newsletter may be submitted by e-mail or on disk. Short typed manuscripts can 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: Ruth Pelling, AEA Membership Secretary, 14 Perfect View, Camden, Bath BA1 5JY, Tel: 01225 332275; membership@envarch.net This issue of the Newsletter includes a report on matters discussed during the AGM at Bournemouth University in October.We would like to remind anyone planning to attend the Annual Conference in Belfast next April that they need to register no later than 20th February 2003 if they require accommodation and wish to attend the conference dinner. Information about the conference and a booking form are provided in this Newsletter. We are grateful to Peter Murphy for his article on archived environmental remains from the East of England, and would be happy to receive more information about accessible archive collections for future issues of the Newsletter. Peter Murphy has moved to: English Heritage, East of England, Brooklands, 24 Brooklands Avenue, Cambridge CB2 2BU. Direct dial: 01223 582759 Fax: 01223 582701 E-mail: peter.murphy@english-heritage.org.uk
SUMMARY OF THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING, 19 OCTOBER 2002 At the AEA AGM in Bournemouth, a review of the committees activities was presented along with elections for new committee members and a vote to amend the constitution. A summary of the main items, announcements and reminders is presented below: CONFERENCES UPDATE Publications Publications stemming from the 1999/2000 Guildford conference, the joint AEA/NABO Glasgow conference (2001) and the one-day meeting in Birmingham (2001) are progressing well. The Guildford volume should be out later this year, or early 2003 at the latest, and the Glasgow volume should be published in 2003. For a full list of papers in the volumes, please see the website: www.envarch.net/aeaconferences.html. Forthcoming conferences/meetings The spring 2003 conference is in Belfast, organised by Nicki Whitehouse, Eileen Murphy, Finbar McCormick, and Gill Plunkett. The conference theme is Worlds Apart? Human settlements and biota of islands. More details about the conference are given below. 2004 is the 25th Anniversary of the AEA and, as announced at the last AGM, the conference is due to be held in Bad Buchau (hosted by Ralf Baumeister [Director of the Federseemuseum] and Helmut Schlichtherle [Director of the Landesdenkmalamt]). This conference will take place in early September and more details should be available in the not too distant future. An offer has been received from King Alfreds College, Winchester, to hold the 2005 spring conference there. Meetings in 2002 Two very successful one-day meetings were organised this year. Eileen Reilly arranged an Irish AEA meeting in Dublin in March and Helen Smith, Mark Maltby, Ellen Hambleton, and Sheila Boardman hosted the autumn one-day meeting in Bournemouth in October. Thanks are extended to the organisers of both these meetings. Thanks are also extended to David Smith for his efforts towards organising an AEA fieldtrip. Unfortunately, due to low take-up, the fieldtrip did not take place. JOURNAL UPDATE Volume 7 of Environmental Archaeology will be distributed in November/December as usual. As announced in the May 2002 Newsletter, Volume 8 (2003) will have two issues. Members are encouraged to keep on submitting articles to the Co-ordinating Editor of the journal (see www.shef.ac.uk/~ap/envarch/index.html). WEBSITE UPDATE (http://www.envarch.net) The AEA has a new webmaster: Rob Craigie (r.craigie@sheffield.ac.uk) based at the University of Sheffield. Please send in items and ideas for the website to him. Feedback is also welcome, which can either be sent to Rob or the committee (via cp24@le.ac.uk) Many thanks are extended to Mark Beech, the webmaster until October, who redesigned and ran the website since May 2000, with good wishes for his new position in Abu Dhabi. Volumes 1-4 of Circaea (the former journal of the association) are now available on-line at: www.envarch.net/circaea.html. Gradually, all volumes will be made available as funds allow. There is also a plan to make James Greigs bibliography (as published in past AEA Newsletters) available on the website. NEWSLETTER UPDATE The Newsletter is now largely circulated by e-mail, which has considerably reduced costs (see Treasurers Report below). The Newsletter Editors received a good response from their recent call for members who currently receive the paper copies of the Newsletter to transfer to e-mail. Any other members who have e-mail addresses, but have not informedthe Newsletter Editors, are asked to get in touch. This can also be done on-line under change my AEA membership details on the website (www.envarch.net/aeaform.html).
Members are reminded that it is possible to attach digital images to Newsletter items. These images will be put in the gallery on the website (www.envarch.net/gallery.html) and hyper-linked to the Newsletter. Digital images to illustrate Newsletter items (gif or jpeg files please) should be sent to the Newsletter Editors. MEMBERSHIP UPDATE The Membership Secretary, Ruth Pelling (membership@envarch.net), changed address this year. If you need to contact her, please use the address given at the top of the Newsletter. Members paying by standing order who are not paying the correct amount (e.g. if you were a student member and are now a full member or have not updated your standing order to cover the last subscription rise) are kindly asked to contact the Membership Secretary (also see: www.envarch.net/memship.html). Only people who have paid their 2002 subscription in full will receive a copy of EA7. CHARITABLE STATUS There was an announcement in the August Newsletter that the AEA managing committee is currently considering applying for charitable status in the UK. If a successful application should be made, the main advantage is that charitable status would allow the AEA to claim back tax for UK tax paying members. This would require those members affected to fill in a Gift Aid Declaration form. TREASURERS REPORT The accounts for 2001 were published in Newsletter 77 (August 2002). The accounts are more complex than in previous years because the Glasgow conference was administered through the account, but the main income is from subscriptions and the main expenditureis on the journal. Decreased costs associated with dissemination of the Newsletter by e-mail are being spent on development and maintenance of the website. PROPOSED SUBSCRIPTION RISE The second issue of EA volume 8 will be paid for from existing funds (a free issue) but, unfortunately, there will have to be a subscription rise to continue production of two issues from 2004 onwards. There will be a vote on this in autumn 2003. The vote will be to maintain production of two issues of the journal per year, which includes a necessary subscription rise. VOTE TO AMEND THE CONSTITUTION The proposed amendments to make the AEA Treasurer an elected officer of the AEA were passed. The full constitution is available on-line at: www.envarch.net/constitution.html. The new sections now read: 10. The affairs of the Association shall be handled by a Management Committee which shall include nine ordinary elected members and an elected Chair, Secretary and Treasurer 12. The Chair, Secretary and Treasurer shall be elected at the Annual General Meeting from the membership. Candidates for election must be members of the Association, and can be nominated by any member of the Association. Nominations must begiven to a member of the Managing Committee no later than the beginning of the AGM. The Chair and Secretary will normally serve until the third Annual General Meeting after the one at which they were elected. An outgoing ordinary committee member may be elected as Secretary, Treasurer or Chair. [Please note: this wording differs from that published in the August 2002 newsletter in the inclusion of 'Treasurer' in the last sentence.] 13. The Managing Committee may co-opt up to six members who may serve as membership secretary, a representative of the journal editorship and a representative of the editorship of the Newsletter until such time as they resign or are replaced by the Managing Committee. The Committee will review co-opted members annually, normally at the AGM or the first. ELECTION OF NEW COMMITTEE MEMBERS At the AGM, Jacqui Huntley was elected Treasurer. Roel Lauwerier, David Robinson and Nicki Whitehouse were elected asnew ordinary members. Personal statements from Jacqui Huntley and Roel Lauwerier are given below (please see the August Newsletter for personal statements from David Robinson and Nicki Whitehouse). The current committee consists of [elected term in]:
Co-opted committee members
Full contact details of the committee can be found at: www.envarch.net/committee.html The current committee extend their thanks to the retiring members: Megan Brickley, Otto Brinkkemper and Sabine Karg for all their efforts for the AEA. BIOGRAPHIES OF NEW AEA COMMITTEE MEMBERS (not previously published in the August Newsletter) Jacqui Huntley Jacqui Huntley kindly agreed to stand as Treasurer. She writes: "After being a member of the AEA since its inception and making good use of contacts and information provided by it in my own specialist work I feel that it is appropriate to return the favour. Therefore, I am willing to be nominated for the position of Treasurer to the Association of Environmental Archaeologists. I have a wide experience of financial matters and am a thoroughly responsible and organised person. For about 10 years I was the Administrator of the Biological Laboratory within the Department of Archaeology at the University of Durham during which I organised and dealt with all contractual and financial matters - from payment of the milk bill to keeping the books formajor pieces of post-excavation work. To be fair, the University dealt with formal auditing matters and the actual production of cheques although knowing, on a day-to-day basis, what funds were available in which code was both essential and very much up to me - Corporate finance being what it is. I learnt two different financial systems through this period (and have since learnt a third due to the University yet again changing systems) and became reasonably familiar with financial jargon. I still prefer plain English. I continue to manage my own research and English Heritage finances on that day-to-day basis as well as our family accounts. I manage routine, but sporadic, income/outgoings through continuing sales of the 1995 "Regional Review" and dealt with the finances of the 1993 (was it REALLY that long ago?) AEA Conference at Durham, organised by Sue Stallibrass and myself. I continue to keep accurate and up-to-date records, mostly of sites' data now, and see this as simply a matter of routine - the more immediately they are done the fewer the errors. Such record keeping, plus making sure that a spare set of calculator batteries is always in stock, are key to a good Treasurer - I have both!" Proposed by: Carol Palmer, Seconded by: Rupert Housley
Roel C.G.M. Lauwerier I am a senior researcher in archaeozoology at the Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek (ROB), the National Service for Archaeological Heritage. Weare part of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, and are based at Amersfoort, The Netherlands. I studied Biology (Botany, History of Biology, Archaeozoology) at the Universities of Nijmegen and Groningen. In 1988 I completed my PhD on 'Animalsin Roman times in the Dutch eastern river area' (University of Groningen). Since my appointment at the ROB in 1990, I have published on various archaeozoological subjects from the Mesolithic until the 17th century, but with an emphasis on the Roman period.In the last few years, because the remit of my institute changed from 'pure' archaeological research to the development of applied knowledge for heritage management, I am increasingly involved with subjects such as degradation, the availability of information, the evaluation of sites, and gaps in our knowledge. I am a member of the International Committee of ICAZ. Considering the present composition of the AEA Committee, I hope to give it some more archaeozoological input, and possibly my position as an archaeozoologist at an overseas heritage institute can contribute to the scope of the AEA. Proposed by: Otto Brinkkemper, Seconded by: Henk van Haaster AEA POSTERS AND MEMBERSHIP LEAFLETS If you are attending a meeting/conference and would like to advertise the AEA, copies of the AEA poster (in English, Dutch, French, and German) can now be borrowed from Tim Mighall (gex043@coventry.ac.uk), the Publicity Officer, who can also supply membership leaflets. DISCOUNTED SUBSCRIPTIONS Readers are reminded that as AEA members they can obtain discounted subscriptions to the Journal of Archaeological Science (see: http://www.envarch.net/jas-discount.html) and The Holocene (see below). ADVANCE NOTICE ON THE TIMING OF THE 2003 AGM The next AGM will be held at the autumn 2003 one-day meeting rather than at the spring conference in Belfast. AEA BOOKS Allan Hall sends the following message: With considerable uncertainties surrounding my post in the past 18 months I have been less active than I should have liked in promoting sales of books at a discount to AEA members. Sales of books by Albarella (ed), Brothwell and Pollard (eds) and Rixson were very successful, however, largely because I adopted a policy of canvassing members by e-mail, or through the Newsletter, and thus ensured a large part of the sales for any title in advance. This approach seems to me to be more effective than sales through a bookstall at meetings (which involves a deal of effort in transporting books to and fro, not to mention wear and tear on the books themselves, and the nuisance of a lot of unsold stock gathering dustin my office not to mention the tying up of AEA funds!). So for the future I think I will pursue this policy of establishing a core purchasing base for titles in advance of buying them for the Association, using e-mail and the Newsletter as appropriate. But it would help me if members could alert me to newly-published titles they think they and other members would like to buy. Perhaps I could use this opportunity to canvass members regarding the recently published Festschrift for our former Chair, Don Brothwell. The collection of papers, Bones and the man, edited by Keith Dobney and Terry OConnor was recently published by Oxbow at £30.00 (currently listed on their Web site at www.oxbowbooks.com/bookinfo.cfm?&ID=52605). I will probably be able to buy it for AEA members with a 20% discount if we can get enough sales to make a bulk order of 15-20 copies. Would any member wishing to take advantage of this please let me know, preferably by e-mail to biol8@york.ac.uk? Allan Hall, Department of Biology (Area 12), University of York, PO Box 373, York YO10 5YW REDUCED SUBSCRIPTION RATE FOR THE HOLOCENE A quick reminder of one benefit of membership of AEA a reduced individual subscription rate to "The Holocene". The Holocene (impact factor 1.979) is dedicated to fundamental scientific research on environmental change over the last 10,000 years including past, present and future change on local, regional and global scales. The reduced rate for 2003 is £91 (EU) US$173 (USA/Canada) and £108 (Rest of world) - saving over 10% of the normal price. All subscribers receive free online access to the journal and the digitised back issues. Visit the website www.holocenejournal.com for further details and to subscribe or request a sample copy. Alternatively contact:Arnold Journals Turpin Distribution Services Ltd Blackhorse Road Letchworth Herts G6 1HN UK t. +44 (0)1462 488900 f. +44 (0)1462 480947 e. subscriptions@turpinltd.com Worlds apart? Human settlement and biota of islands Association for Environmental Archaeology Annual Symposium, School of Archaeology and Palaeoecology, Queens University Belfast, Belfast. 24th-26th April 2003 Islands play a central role in the formation of both environmental and social communities. This conference aims to bring together palaeoecologists, environmental archaeologists, archaeologists and social historians to explore these themes. Ireland has a rich archaeology and natural history associated with islands, ranging from investigations of small islands and crannogs in lakes, islands in sea Loughs and inlets to of islands off the coast. In addition to these more obvious islands, there are areas of dry islands land within substantial areas of bog and floodplain, which have been foci for colonisation by fauna, flora and human inhabitants. However, people have also created their own social islands or isolated communities, on grounds of religious or cultural difference. The conference aims to explore how such environmental or social communities survived in such settings and the particular problems they faced. Whilst one of the central themes will be the island palaeoecology, archaeology and history of Ireland, we are actively seeking contributions on any aspect of island research. Key issues to be addressed include:
Conference organisers: Dr. Nicki Whitehouse (n.whitehouse@qub.ac.uk), Dr Eileen Murphy (Eileen.Murphy@qub.ac.uk), Dr Finbar McCormick (f.mccormick@qub.ac.uk) Dr Gill Plunkett (g.plunkett@qub.ac.uk). Deadline for submission of paper titles and abstracts (300 words max): 1st December 2002. These should be sent to the conference organisers either by email (aea-islands@qub.ac.uk) or by post to: AEA ConferenceSchool of Archaeology and Palaeoecology Queens University Belfast University Road Belfast BT7 1NN Conference Programme: Thurs 24th April Morning/afternoon: Academic sessions Evening: Wine Reception Friday 25th April Morning/Afternoon: Academic Sessions Evening: Conference Dinner Saturday 26th Morning/afternoon: Optional field trip to Co. Down (Lecale area) Registration This covers all academic sessions, tea and coffees and the wine reception. If you require accommodation and wish to attend the conference dinner, please register no later than the 20th February 2003. After this date, individuals will not be able to register for the dinner and will have to make their own accommodation arrangements. Accommodation Bed and Breakfast accommodation for the conference has been arranged at Queens, close to the conference venue. Accommodation comprises single rooms (not en suite), at £21 per person per night, including breakfast. For people wishing to stay over Saturday night, they will need to make their own arrangements. Please see the booking form at the back of the Newsletter for details of costs. Details of the field trip, maps, information on accommodation and transport and a full conference schedule and itinerary will be sent following receipt of booking form If you require any further details, please address enquiries to the organising committee at the above address or email us on: aea-islands@qub.ac.uk Organised by the Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford (U.K.) and the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Professor Donald Ortner of the Department of Anthropology, Smithsonian Institution, and Dr. Christopher Knüsel of the Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford, announce the 6th European Palaeopathology short course that will take place from Sunday 10th August (arrival and registration) through Friday 22nd August 2003, at the University of Bradford, in its newly refurbished laboratories. This course will again cover topics in the study of health and demographic characteristics of past human populations, including age estimation and sex determination, estimates of body proportion and stature from human remains, specific and non-specific infectious disease, degenerative joint disease, metabolic disease, congenital abnormality, stress indicators, dental disease, activity-related skeletal change, and the use of histological techniques in the differential diagnosis of ancient disease. Course lecturers will include, in addition to Professor Ortner, Dr. Megan Brickley (Birmingham), Dr. Alan Cooper (Oxford), Dr. Mary Lewis (Bournemouth), Dr. Simon Mays (English Heritage), Dr. Charlotte Roberts (Durham), and Prof. Michael Schultz (Göttingen), as well as Mrs. Anthea Boylston, and Drs. Knüsel, Alan Ogden, Mike Richards, Holger Schutkowski, and Darlene Weston from Bradford. This course will, again, include a lecture on the use of ancient DNA to complement and extend the macro and microscopic analysis of palaeopathological conditions and, for the first time, it will also cover isotopic analysis of human remains. For further information and application forms, please contact: Dr. Christopher Knüsel, Calvin Wells Laboratory, Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, West Yorkshire, BD7 1DP, United Kingdom, Tel: +44 (0)1274 233534, Fax: +44 (0)21274 235190, E-Mail: c.knusel@bradford.ac.uk
Ancient Materials,Technology & Conservation AMTeC now has an experienced archaeobotanist on the team specialising in post-excavation analysis of plant macro-remains and molluscs.For further information and the full range of services available please contact Dana Goodburn-Brown, tel (0)1634 832627/ Danagb@Msn.Com or Lisa Gray MSc, P.G.C.E.(Archaeobotanist), tel (0)1795 590603/07812028697/email lgray@tiscali.co.uk The Foundry,The Historic Dockyard,Chatham, Kent, The Murphy Collection of biological remains from archaeological sites in the East of England From January 1977 to June 2002 Peter Murphy was employed on contracts from English Heritage at the Centre of East Anglian Studies, University of East Anglia, where he worked initially as Environmental Archaeologist, more recently as Regional Advisor for Archaeological Science. Over that period plant and animal macrofossils were retrieved, assessed, analysed and published from numerous sites in the East of England (Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Hertfordshire and Cambridgeshire, but not Bedfordshire). It has been decided that these macrofossils are best kept together as one collection, rather than being archived by site or county, since this will ensure that material is readily accessible for future bioarchaeological researchers. It is housed at Norwich Castle Museum as the Murphy Collection. The collection consists principally of plant macrofossils (charred, waterlogged, mineral-replaced, latex casts of impressions) and shells of land, freshwater, estuarine and marine molluscs. Flots and residues have generally been discarded due to problems of space, but some partly sorted flots including exceptionally high densities of macrofossils have been retained. Also included aresome remains of mineral-replaced insects, crustaceans, avian eggshell, coprolites, some phytolith preparations and mosses, as well as selected charcoal and wood samples which are interpretable unequivocally as fuel residues from specific processes or as structural components. Other categories of biological material from these sites, including foraminifera, palynomorphs, bones of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and small mammals are currently held by the specialists who worked on them, in most cases. Large mammal and human remains are mostly archived together with artefactual material from individual sites. The material represents all periods from the Mesolithic to 16th century AD. It includes macrofossils from extensive rural survey/management projects (e.g. Hullbridge Survey (Essex coast), Fenland Management Project) and from many other rural sites. Urban excavations at Colchester, Ipswich, Norwich, Thetford and other cities in the region are also represented. A full catalogue of the collection, which includes references to published reports, is available as an e-mail attachment from peter.murphy@english-heritage.org.uk. Study of this collection by bona fide scholars is welcomed: contact alan.west.mus@norfolk.gov.uk. However, prior to any investigations involving destructive techniques of analysis there should be consultation with John Davies, Curator of Archaeology, Castle Museum, Norwich (john.davies.mus@norfolk.gov.uk) and the writer. Peter Murphy,Regional Advisor for Archaeological Science, English Heritage, East of England, Brooklands, 24 Brooklands Avenue, Cambridge CB2 2BU. Direct dial: 01223 582759 Fax: 01223 582701 E-mail:peter.murphy@english-heritage.org.uk We are very grateful to James Greig for the following information. James writes;. Many thanks for publications received from Otto Brinkkemper, Michael O'Connell, Joyce van Dijk, Angela Kreuz and J.T. Zeiler. References gratefully received on jimi.gee@virgin.net (please note new email). This is a shorter list than usual as some sources could not be consulted. BOOKS H. Buitenhuis and W. Prummel (2001) Animal and man in the past; essays in honour of A.T. Clason, emeritus professor of archaeozoology in the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, the Netherlands. (ARC publication, 41) ARC, Groningen. C. Dickson and J. Dickson (2000) Plants and people in ancient Scotland. Tempus, Stroud, 320 pp. ISBN 0 7524 1905 6; £25 pb E. Hajnalova (1999) Archeobotanika pestovanych rastlin [Archaeobotany of cultivated plants], Nitra. P. Halstead and C. Frederick (2000) Landscape and land use in postglacial Greece. Sheffield Academic Press, Sheffield. J.D. Klenck (2002) The Canaanite cultivation milieu - the zooarchaeological evidence from Tel Haror, Israel, 2000-1500 BCE. (BAR International Series, S1029) Tempus Reparatum, Oxford, pp. ISBN 1 84171 407 0; £35. V. Matterne-Zech (2001) Agriculture et alimentation végétale durant l'age du Fer et l'epoque gallo-romaine en France septentrionale [Iron age and Gallo-Roman farming and plant foods in southern France]. Montagnac, Mergoil. F. Pryor (2001) The Flag Fen basin: archaeology and environment of a fenland landscape. English Heritage, London, 475 pp. ISBN 1 85074 753 9;£75 hb. B.A. Purdy (2001) Enduring records; the environmental and cultural heritage of wetlands. Oxbow, Oxford, 302 pp. S. Rippon (2000) The transformation of coastal wetlands; exploitation and management of marshland landscapes in northwest Europe during the Roman and medieval periods. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 332 pp. S. Rippon (2001) Estuarine archaeology; the Severn estuary and beyond. (Archaeology in the Severn estuary, 11) Severn estuary research committee, Exeter, 214 pp. ISSN 1354 7089. THESES J. Lechterbeck (2000) "Human impact" oder "climatic change"? Zur Vegetationsgeschichte des Spätglazials und Holozäns in hochauflösenden Pollenanalysen laminierter Sedimente des Steiblinger Sees (Südwestdeutschland) [Human impact or climatic change; Late-glacial and Holocene vegetation history from pollen analyses of laminated sediments from Steiblinger See, southwest Germany]. Dissertation, Tübingen university. G.-B. Narten (1999) Entwicklung eines Bestimmungsschlüssels für verkohltes Fruchtfleisch, Brot und Brei [Development of an identification key for charred fruit flesh, bread and porage]. Diploma, Basel university. S.M. Valamoti (2001) Archaeobotanical investigation of late Neolithic and early Bronze Age agriculture and plant exploitation in northern Greece. doctoral thesis, Sheffield university. CHAPTERS E. Allison and A. Hall (2001) The plant and invertebrate remains. In M. Hicks and A. Hicks (eds.), St Gregory's priory, Northgate, Canterbury, excavations 1988-1991. (The Archaeology of Canterbury (new series) 2) Canterbury Archaeological Trust, Canterbury pp. 334-338. D. Banham (2002) Investigating the Anglo-Saxon Materia Medica: archaeobotany, manuscript art, Latin and Old English. In R. Arnott (ed.), The archaeology of medicine. (BAR International Series 1046) Tempus Reparatum, Oxford pp. 95-100. L. Bartosiewicz, V. Boroneant, C. Bonsall, et al. (2001) New data on the prehistoric fauna of the Iron Gates; a case study from Schela Cladovei, Romania. In R. Kertesz and J. Makkay (eds.), From the Mesolithic to the Neolithic; proceedings of the international archaeological conference, Damjanich Museum of Solnok, 1996., pp. 15-21. N. Boenke and A. Kreuz (2002) Erste archäobotanische Ergebnisse zu Landwirtschaft und Umwelt. In Schallmayer (ed.), Hessen Archäologie. Theiss, Stuttgart pp. 35-38. A. Bogaard, G. Jones, M. Charles, et al. (2000) The scale and intensity of cultivation: evidence from weed ecology. In P. Halstead and C. Frederick (eds.), Landscape and land use in postglacial Greece. Sheffield Academic Press, Sheffield pp. 129-134. C. Brombacher (2000) Archäobotanische Untersuchungen. In A. Hafner and P. J. Suter (eds.), - 3400. Die Entwicklung der Bauerngesellschaften im 4. Jahrtausand v. Chr am Bielersee aufgrund der Rettungsgrabungen von Nidau und Sutz-Lattrigen [to 3400, the development of farming communities in the 4th millennium B.C. by the Bielersee, from rescue excavations at Nidau and Sutz-Lattrigen]. Berner Lehrmittel- und Medienverlag, Bern pp. 155-168. A. Cameron, J. Bayley and C. Keepax (2001) The human bones. In A. S. Anderson, J. S. Wacher and A. P. Fitzpatrick (eds.), The Romano-British "small town" at Wanborough, Wiltshire; excavations 1996-1976. (Britannia Monograph Series 19) Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, London pp. 342-344. M. Canti (2001) What is geoarchaeology? Re-examining the relationship between archaeology and earth sciences. In U. Albarella (ed.), Environmental archaeology, meaning and purpose. Kluwer/Plenum, New York pp. 103-112. M. Ciaraldi (2002) The interpretation of medicinal plants in the archaeological context: some case-studies from Pompeii. In R. Arnott (ed.), The archaeology of medicine. (BAR International Series 1046) Tempus Reparatum, Oxford pp. 81-85. E. Esser and M. Verhagen (2001) The white stork (Ciconia ciconia) in an archaeological and historical perspective. In H. Buitenhuis and W. Prummel (eds.), Animal and man in the past. (ARC publications 41) ARC, Groningen pp. 291-307. A.R. Hall and J.P. Huntley (2002) The post-Roman period. In C. Brooks, R. Daniels and A. Harding (eds.), Past, present and future: the archaeology of northern England. (Architectural and archaeological society of Durham and Northumberland research report 5), pp. 155-162. G.C. Hillman (2000) Abu Hureyra I: the Epipalaeolithic. In A. M. T. Moore, G. C. Hillman and A. J. Legge (eds.), Village on the Euphrates. Oxford University Press, Oxford pp. 327-399. J.P. Huntley (2001) Macrobotanical investigation of material from excavations. In B. Vyner (ed.), Stainmore, the archaeology of a north Pennine pass. (Tees Archaeology Monograph Series 1) Tees Archaeology/English Heritage, pp. 34-35. J.P. Huntley (2002) Environmental archaeology; Mesolithic to Roman period. In C. Brooks, R. Daniels and A. Harding (eds.), Past, present and future: the archaeology of northern England. (Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland, Research Report 5) Architectural and Archaeological Society of Durham and Northumberland, pp. 79-96. J. Jones and V. Straker (2002) Macroscopic remains from prehistoric features; the Romano-British enclosures and settlement, macroscopic plant remains. In S. M. Davies, P. S. Bellamy, M. J. Heaton, et al. (eds.), Excavations at Alington Avenue, Fordington, Dorchester, Dorset, 1984-87. (Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society Monograph 15), pp. 55-56, 118-121. H. Kenward and A.R. Hall (2001) Plants, intestinal parasites and insects. In A. S. Cameron and J. A. Stones (eds.), Aberdeen; an in-depth view of the city's past. (Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Monograph Series 19) Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh pp. 280-297. A. Kreuz (2002) Landwirtschaft und Umwelt im keltischen Hessen [Celtic farming and environment in Hesse]. In H. Baitinger and B. Pinsker (eds.), Das Rätsel der Kelten, vom Glauberg. Theiss, Stuttgart pp. 75-81. K. Molloy (2002) Holocene vegetation and land-use history at Mooghaun, S.E. Clare, with particular reference to the Bronze Age. In E. Grogan (ed.), The north Munster project; the later prehistoric landscape of southeast Clare. (Discovery Programme Monographs ) Discovery Programme, Dublin . V. Straker (2001) 3.3.9. Archaeological remains. In D. E. G. Briggs and P. R. Crowther (eds.), Palaeobiology II. Blackwell Science, Oxford pp. 325-328. J.T. Zeiler and W. Prummel (2001) Game and wild birds in the town of Groningen in the 16th and 17th century. In H. Buitenhuis and W. Prummel (eds.), Animals and man in the past. (ARC publication 41) ARC, Groningen pp. 291-307. ARTICLES C. Bakels (2002) Plant remains from Sardinia, Italy, with notes on barley and grape. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 3-8 P. Baker (2002) The vertebrate remains from six Saxon sites in the Lincolnshire and Norfold fenlands (Saxon fenland Management project). Centre for Archaeology Reports 46/2002: 1-74 J. Benes, J. Kastovsky, R. Kocarova, et al. (2002) Archaeobotany of the Old Prague Town defence system, Czech Republic: archaeology, macro-remains, pollen and diatoms. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 1(1-2): 107-119 C. Bernard (2000) Comparative seed micromorphology of Brassica L. and Sinapis L. species growing in France. Seed Science and Technology 3: 699-707 A. Bieniek (2002) Archaeobotanical analysis of some early Neolithic settlements in the Kujawy region, central Poland, with potential plant gathering activities emphasised. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 33-40 A. Bogaard (2002) Questioning the relevance of shifting cultivation to Neolithic farming in the loess belt of Europe: evidence from the Hambacher Forest experiment. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 155-168 O. Brinkkemper and R. de Man (1999) Archeologisch onderzoek van beerput 1 (15e eeuw) [archaeobotanical study of cesspit 1]. Rapportage Archeologische Monumentenzorg 50: 52-59 (in S. Ostkamp, De opgraving van het St Agnesklooster in Oldenzaal) O. Brinkkemper and R. de Man (2000) Archeobotanisch onderzoek (archaeobotanical studies). Rapportage Archeologische Monumentenzorg 47: 27-33 (in E. Drenth (ed) De opgraving Stein-Sandboutlaan II) P. Busby, D.de Moulins, M. Lyne, et al. (2001) Excavations at Clatterford Roman Villa, Isle of Wight. Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society 56: 95-128 (seeds, pollen) A. Butler (2002) Investigations of pod characters in the Vicieae. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 127-132 M. Charles, A. Bogaard, G. Jones, et al. (2002) Towards the archaeobotanical identification of intensive cereal cultivation: present-day ecological investigatio in the mountains of Asturias, northwest Spain. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 133-142 M. Ciaraldi (1999) Food offerings at the Archaic/Hellenistic sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Monte Papalucio (Oria, Apulia, southern Italy). Accordia Research Papers 1997-8: 75-91 G. Clark (1999) The animal bones. Papers of the British School at Rome 67: 85-95, 128-138 (in M. Fulford, A. Wallace-Hadrill, Towards a history of pre-Roman Pompeii; excavation beneath the House of Amarantus) E. Corke, M. Revill, S. Davis, et al. (2002) A list of vertebrate skeletons in the reference collection of the Centre for Archaeology, Portsmouth. Centre for Archaeology Reports 20/2002: 1-43 L. Costantini and J. Giorgi (2001) Charred plant remains of the Archaic period from the Forum and Palatine. Journal of Roman Archaeology 14: 239-248 V. Culikova (1998a) Rostlinné makrozbytky z rane stredovekych sedimentu na III nadvori Prazskeho hradu [Early medieval plant macroremains from the 3rd bailey of Prague castle]. Archaeologica Pragensia 14: 329-341 V. Culikova (1998b) Vysledky analyzy rostlinnych makrozbytku z lokality Praha 1 - Mala strana, Trziste cp 259/III, Hartigovsky Palac [Results of plant macrofossil analyses from Prague 1, Mala strana, Trziste cp 259/III, Hartig palace]. Archaeologica Pragensia 14: 291-316 V. Culikova (2001) Rostlinné makrozbytky a lokality Praha 1 - Mala Strana, Malostranske nameti cp. 258/III, Lichtenstejnsky palac [Plant remains from Malostranske man, Lichtenstein palace]. Mediaevalia Archaeologica 3: 137-166 O. Dalnoki and S. Jacomet (2002) Some aspects of late Iron Age agriculture based on the first results of an archaeobotanical investigation at Corvin tér, Budapest, Hungary. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 9-15 F. Dapples, A.F. Lotter, J.F.N.van Leeuwen, et al. (2002) Palaeolimnological evidence for increased landslide activity due to forest clearance and land-use since 3600 cal BP in the western Swiss Alps. Journal of Paleolimnology 27(2): 239-248 M. Davis, A. Hall, H. Kenward, et al. (2002) Preservation of urban archaeological deposits: monitoring and characterisation of archaeological deposits at Marks & Spencer, 44 Parliament Street, York. Internet Archaeology 11 J.van Dijk (2002) Archeozoölogie [Archaeozoology]. Rapportage Archeologische Monumentenzorg 87: pp ?-? (in P.F.B. Jongste and G.J. van Wijngaarden (eds) Archeologie in de Betuweroute. Het erfgoed van Eigenblok. 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Esser and J.van Dijk (2000) Archeozoölogie [Archaeozoology]. Rapportage Archeologische Monumentenzorg 85: pp?-? (in A.A.A. Verhoeven & O. Brinkkemper (eds) Archeologie in de Betuweroute: Twaalf eeuwen bewoning langs de Linge bij De Stenen Kamer in Kerk-Avezaath, pp 383-484) A. Fairbairn, E. Asouti, J. Near, et al. (2002) Macro-botanical evidence for plant use at Neolithic Çatalhöyük, south-central Anatolia, Turkey. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 41-54 A.S. Fairbairn and P. Austin (2002) archaeobotanical evidence. Oxoniensa 66: 325-333 (in A. Barber, A Romano-British setlement to the rear of Denchworth Rd, Wantage, Oxfordshire; evaluation and excavation in 1996-8) R. Gale (2002) charcoal. Oxoniensa 66: 284-287 (in V. Birkbeck et al, Excavations at Watchfield, Shrivenham, Oxfordshire, pp 221-288) A.R. Gardner (2002) Neolithic to Copper Age woodland impacts in northeast Hungary? Evidence from the pollen and sediment chemistry records. The Holocene 12(5): 541-554 P. Grinton and J.P. Huntley (2001) The plant remains. Archaeologia Aeliana 29: 210-214 (in L. Truman (ed), excavations at Stocksbridge, Newcastle upon Tyne, 1995, 93-221) E. Hahn (2001) Die Tierknochen aus der Grabung Bad Orb-Pfarrgasse [Animal bone from the excavation at Bad Orb-Pfarrgasse]. Berichte der Kommission für Archäologische Landesforschung in Hessen 6: 193-197 S. Hamilton-Dyer (2002) animal bone. Oxoniensa 66: 274-280 (in V. Birkbeck et al, Excavations at Watchfield, Shrivenham, Oxfordshire, pp 221-288) P. Hinton (2002) charred plant remains. Oxoniensa 66: 280-283 (in V. Birkbeck et al, Excavations at Watchfield, Shrivenham, Oxfordshire, pp 221-288) J.P. Huntley (2001) The charred plant remains. Archaeologia Aeliana 29: 214-217 (in L. Truman (ed) Excavations at Stocksbridge, Newcastle upon Tyne, 1995) E. Huysecom (2002) Palaeoenvironment and human population in west Africa: an international research project in Mali. Antiquity 76(292): 335-336 C. Ingram (2002) animal bone. Oxoniensa 66: 202-212 (in J. Moore et al, Excavations at Oxford Science Park, Littlemore, Oxford, pp 163-219) S. Jacomet, D. Kucan, A. Ritter, et al. (2002) Punica granatum L. (pomegranates) from early Roman contexts in Vindonissa (Switzerland). Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 79-92 C. Johnstone and U. Albarella (2002) The late Iron Age and Romano-British mammal and bird bone assemblage from Elms Farm, Heybridge, Essex (site code HYEF93-95). Centre for Archaeology Reports 45/2002: 1-200 C. Jones and A. Gilmer (1999) Roughan Hill, a final Neolithic / early Bronze Age landscape revealed. Archaeology Ireland 13(1): 30-32 S. Karg and T. Märkle (2002) Continuity and change in plant resources during the Neolithic period in western Switzerland. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 169-176 H. Kenward (2001) Insects. Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 1: 80 (http://www.britarch.ac.uk/sair/sair1.html) A. Kreuz (2001) 4.3. Erste Ergebnisse der archäobotanischen Untersuchug in Lahnau-Atzback [first archaeobotanical results from Lahnau-Atzback]. Berichte der Kommission für Archäologische Landesforschung in Hessen 6: 105-106 (in A. Schäfer and T. Stöllner (eds) Frühe Metallgewinnung im mittleren Land, pp. 82-111) A. Kreuz (2002) Zufall, Müll und Mibgeschicke; zu Herkunft und archäobotanischer Auswertung vor- und frühgeschichtlicher Pflanzenfunde [Luck, rubbish and misfortune; the origin and study of prehistoric and early historic plant remains]. Antike Welt 2002/4: 475-479 A. Kreuz and E. Schäfer (2002) A new archaeobotanical database program. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 177-179 A. Kreuz and J. Wiethold (2002) Kontinuität oder Wandel? Archäobotanische Untersuchungen zur eisenzeitlichen und kaiserzeitlichen Landwirtschaft der Siedlung Mardorf 23 [Continuity or change? Archaeobotanical study of the Iron Age and early Roman farming at the settlement Mardorf 23]. Denkmalpflege und Kulturgeschichte 1/2002: 40-43 L. Kubiak-Martens (2002) New evidence for the use of root foods in pre-agrarian subsistence recovered from the late Mesolithic site at Halsskov, Denmark. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 23-31 L. Kubiak-Martens, J.van Dijk and E. Esser (2001) Dierlijke en plantaardige resten uit een beerput aan de Voordam 2 te Alkmaar, een beknopt onderzoek [animal and plant remains from a cesspit at the Voordam in Alkmaar, a brief study]. Rapporten over de Alkmaars Monumentenzorg en Archeologie 10: pp?-? (inS. Ostkamp, R. Roedema & R. van Wilgen (eds) Vijf eeuwen bewoning op drie locaties in het oostelijk stadsdeel, pp 87-94) A.F. Lotter (2001) The palaeolimnology of Soppensee (central Switzerland) as evidenced by diatom, pollen and fossil pigment studies. Journal of Paleolimnology 25(1): pp?-? U. Maier (2001) Untersuchung in der neolithischen Ufersiedlung Hornstaad-Hörnle IA am Bodensee [Studies of the Neolithic lakeshore settlement Hornstaad-Hörnle IA, Lake Constance]. Forschungen und Berichte zur Vor- und Frühgeschichte in Baden-Württemberg 74: 11-384 M. Maltby (2002) animal bone. Oxoniensa 66: 320-325 (in A. Barber, A Romano-British setlement to the rear of Denchworth Rd, Wantage, Oxfordshire; evaluation and excavation in 1996-8) S.A. Mays, M.P. Richards and B.T. Fuller (2002) Bone stable isotope evidence for infant feeding in medieval England. Antiquity 76 (293): 654-656 J.I. McKinley (2002) human bone. Oxoniensa 66: 266-274 (in V. Birkbeck et al, Excavations at Watchfield, Shrivenham, Oxfordshire, pp 221-288) J. Miettinen, E. Grönlund, H. Simola, et al. (2002) Palaeolimnology of lake Pieni-Kuuppalanlampi (Kurkijoki, Karelian Republic, Russia): isolation history, lake ecosystem development and long-term agricultural impact. Journal of Paleolimnology 27(1): 29-44 L. Motta (2002) Planting the seed of Rome. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 71-77 E.M. Murphy (2002) Human osteoarchaeology in Ireland: past, present and future. Antiquity 76 (292): 512-517 M. O'Connell and K. Molloy (2001) Farming and woodland dynamics in Ireland during the Neolithic. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Section B 101B (1-2): 99-128 A.G. Parker (2002) pollen. Oxoniensa 66: 213-216 (in J. Moore et al, Excavations at Oxford Science Park, Littlemore, Oxford, pp 163-219) R. Pelling (2002) charred plant remains. Oxoniensa 66: 212-213 (in J. Moore et al, Excavations at Oxford Science Park, Littlemore, Oxford, pp 163-219) J. Peters, D. Helmer, A.von den Driesch, et al. (1999) Early animal husbandry in the northern Levant. Paléorient 25: 27-47 P. Pokorny (2000) Pylova analyza stredovekeho kommunikacniho horizontu z Prahy [Pollen analysis of a medieval communication horizon from Prague]. Archaeologica Pragensia 15: 141-146 A. Poska and L. Saarse (2002) Vegetation development and introduction of agriculture to Saarema Island, Estonia: the human response to shore displacement. The Holocene 12(5): 555-568 W. Prummel, M. Niekus and A.L.van Gijn (2002) A late Mesolithic kill site of aurochs at Jardinga, the Netherlands. Antiquity 76 (292): 413-424 J. Ratcliffe and V. Straker (2002) The changing landscape and coastline of the Isles of Scilly; recent research. Cornish Archaeology 36: 64-76 N. Roberts, S. Black, P. Boyer, et al. (1999) Chronology and stratigraphy of late Quaternary sediments in the Knoya basin, Turkey; results from the KOPAL project. Quaternary Science Reviews 18: 611-630 N. Roberts, J.M. Reed, M.J. Leng, et al. (2001) The tempo of Holocene climatic change in the eastern Mediterranean region: new high resolution data crater lake sediment data from central Turkey. The Holocene 11: 721-736 M. Robinson (1999) The macroscopic plant remains. Papers of the British School at Rome 67: 95-102, 139-144 (in M. Fulford and A. Wallace-Hadrill (eds) Towards a history of pre-Roman Pompeii; excavations beneath the House of Amarantus, 1995-8) M. Robinson (2002a) Domestic burnt offerings and sacrifices at Roman and pre-Roman Pompeii, Italy. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 93-99 M. Robinson (2002b) English Heritage review of environmental archaeology; southern region insects. Centre for Archaeology Reports 39/2002: 1-137 M. Rösch, O. Ehrmann, L. Hermann, et al. (2002) An experimental approach to Neolithic shifting cultivation. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 143-154 G. Schmenkel (2001) Pollenanalytische Untersuchungen im Taunus [Pollen analysis work in the Taunus hills]. Berichte der Kommission für Archäologische Landesforschung in Hessen 6: 225-232 V. Straker, R. Brunning and J. Jones (2002) The Brue valley, Somerset; Holocene stratigraphy and palaeoecology, and the possible influence of sea level change. Bath Spa University College Occasional Papers in Geography 2: 31-36 M.-R. Usai (2002) Northern regional review of environmental archaeology: geoarchaeology in northern England II; site review, discussion and research priorities. Centre for Archaeology Report 24/2002: 1-64 S.M. Valamoti (2002) Food remains from Bronze Age Archondiko and Mesimeriani Toumba in northern Greece. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 17-22 C. Vermeeren and H.van Haaster (2002) The embalming of the ancestors of the Dutch royal family. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 121-126 L. Vermoere, S. Bottema, L. Vanheke, et al. (2002) Palynological evidence for late-Holocene human occupation recorded in two wetlands in SW Turkey. The Holocene 12(5): 569-584 J. Weinstock (2002a) The animal remains from Scarborough Castle, North Yorkshire. Centre for Archaeology Reports 21/2002 J. Weinstock (2002b) Demography through osteometry; sex ratios of reindeer and hunting strategies in the Late-glacial site of Stellmoor, northern Germany. Archaeozoologia 11: 187-198 J. Weinstock (2002c) The medieval and post-medieval bone remains from Heigham Street, Norwich. Centre for Archaeology Report 32/2002: 1-66 C.E. Wells, D. Hodgkinson and E. Huckerby (2000) Evidence for the possible role of beaver (Castor fiber) in the prehistoric ontogenesis of a mire in northwest England. The Holocene 10(4): 503-508 C. Wild, D. Anderson, D. Boardman, et al. (2001) Evidence for medieval clearance in the Seathwaite valley, Cumbria. Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society 1: 53-68 G. Willcox (2002) Charred plant remains from a 10th millennium B.P. kitchen at Jerf el Ahmar, Syria. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 55-60 H. Woldring and R. Cappers (2001) The origins of the "wild orchards" of central Anatolia. Turkish Journal of Botany 25: 1-9 M.E. Wollstonecroft (2002) The fruits of their labour; plants and plant processing at EeRb 140 (860±60 uncal B.P.), a late prehistoric hunter gatherer fisher site on the southern Interior Plateau, British Columbia, Canada. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 61-70 Yuan Jing and R.K. Flad (2002) Pig domestication in ancient China. Antiquity 76 (293): 724-732 B. Zach (2002) Vegetable offerings on the Roman sacrificial site in Mainz, Germany - short report on the first results. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 11(1-2): 101-106 6th Biennial Human Skeletal Palaeopathology Short Course 10th 22th August 2003 Booking Form Name.......................................................... Phone.................. ........................ .... Address............................................................................................ ........................... .... . .........................Postcode........................... ... 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Worlds apart? Human settlement and biota of islands.
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