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         British Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. From Joseph to Joshua;: Biblical traditions in the light of archaeology (The Schweich lectures of the British Academy) by Harold Henry Rowley, 1952
  2. Canhasan Sites I: Canhasan 1: Stratigraphy and Structures (British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monographs) (v. 1) by David French, 1998-12-01
  3. Romano-British Mosaics (Shire Archaeology) by Peter Johnson, 2008-03-04
  4. Maritime Archaeology and Social Relations: British Action in the Southern Hemisphere (The Springer Series in Underwater Archaeology) by Virginia Dellino-Musgrave, 2010-11-02
  5. Upper Zohar, an Early Byzantine Fort in Palaestina Tertia (British Academy Monographs in Archaeology) by Richard P. Harper, 1996-12-26
  6. Ultrecht-Britain and the Continent: Archaeology Art and Architecture (British Archaeological Association Conference Transactions) (BAA CONFERENCE TRANSACTIONS SERIES) by Elisabeth de BIEVRE, 1996-12-31
  7. King's Lynn and the Fens: Medieval Art, Architecture and Archaeology (British Archaeological Association (BAA) Conference Transaction Series)
  8. Industrial Archaeology of Galloway (Industrial Archaeology of British Isles) by Ian Donnachie, 1971-04-15
  9. A Thesaurus of British Archaeology by Lesley Adkins, Roy A. Adkins, 1982-06
  10. British archaeological thesaurus: For use with British archaeological abstracts and other publications with British archaeology (Practical handbooks in archaeology) by Cherry Lavell, 1989
  11. Archaeology in British Towns: From the Emperor Claudius to the Black Death by Patrick Ottaway, 1996-06-25
  12. The Industrial Archaeology of Dartmoor (Industrial Archaeology of the British Isles) by Helen Harris, 1987-09
  13. Archaeology in Sussex to A.D. Fifteen Hundred (Research report / the Council for British Archaeology)
  14. Medieval Towns: The Archaeology of British Towns in their European Setting (Studies in the Archaeology of Medieval Europe) by John Schofield, Alan G. Vince, 2005-12-31

41. RESCUE - The British Archaeological Trust - LINKS
Surveyors; BBC History; Boxgrove Archaeological Excavations; BritishAcademy; british archaeology; british archaeology Jobs Resource;
http://www.rescue-archaeology.freeserve.co.uk/links.html
RESCUE
The British Archaeological Trust

15a Bull Plain, Hertford,
Hertfordshire SG14 1DX
Telephone: 01992-553377
email

Charity No. 1064836 Updated: 24 March, 2003
RESCUE
LINKS
Links to archaeological web sites of interest

42. British Archaeology, No 26, July 1997: Features
An article by Andrew Chamberlain from british archaeology discussing Paleolithic mortuary practices in Great Britain.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba26/ba26feat.html#cavern
British Archaeology , no 26, July 1997: Features
In this dark cavern thy burying place
For most of prehistory, people buried their dead in caves. Andrew Chamberlain reports Natural caves - dark, damp, often inhospitable places - might not appeal today as sites for burying the dead. Yet for much of prehistory, caves, fissures and rock shelters seem to have been favoured burial places in Britain and elsewhere. Many of the earliest hominid remains in Britain have been found in caves - such as the Neanderthal bones from Pontnewydd in North Wales, dating from c 225,000BC - suggesting the practice of cave burial is as old as humankind. Since the last Ice Age ended about 10,000 years ago, people appear to have been continuously buried in caves right up to the Iron Age and Romano-British period, with a single apparent gap in the Late Mesolithic between c 5900-3900BC, when no cave burials have been found. A recent programme of radiocarbon dates on human bones from caves suggests the practice was most common in the Neolithic. After c 3900BC - the start of the Neolithic period - the numbers of people buried in caves increased dramatically, just at the time when people began also to be buried in monuments such as chambered tombs and long barrows. In all, at least 256 individual Neolithic burials have been found in 70 caves in Britain, dated either directly or by association with Neolithic artefacts.

43. Certificate In British Archaeology
Certificate in british archaeology. Location Birmingham and Shrewsbury.Dates Recruiting now. Run by University of Birmingham. Cost Unknown.
http://www.ukarchaeology.org.uk/courses/certificate_in_british.htm
Certificate in British Archaeology Location: Birmingham and Shrewsbury Dates: Recruiting now Run by: University of Birmingham Cost: Unknown Contact Details: Heather Down, University of Birmingham, Selly Oak, Birmingham B29 6LL or Tel 0121 414 3413 or email h.down@bham.ac.uk
Further Details: None Website: None

44. British Archaeology, No 19, November 1996: Features
Mark Roberts discusses why was Europe colonised by hominids half a million years ago. Published in the Journal of british archaeology in 1996.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba19/ba19feat.html#roberts
British Archaeology , no 19, November 1996: Features
Finding magic in Stone Age real ale
The first farmers may have grown barley to brew ale. Merryn Dineley reports Our traditional view of the Neolithic is that it was the period in which people first learned to grow cereal crops, such as barley, in order to make bread and porridge. In a recent article in British Archaeology , however, the archaeological scientist Mike Richards wrote that, on the evidence of bone analysis, meat was more important than grain in the British Neolithic diet ( `First farmers with no taste for grain' , March). He postulated an animal-based Neolithic economy, but pointed nevertheless to the evidence for small-scale grain production. This grain, he suggested, was grown for ritual purposes - but he hazarded no guesses as to what these rituals actually involved. Might the grain have been grown, in fact, for brewing ? And might ale have been a significant part of these rituals? My research suggests that brewing could well have been an important part of British Neolithic domestic and ritual life. We know that the Sumerians were making ale in the 3rd millennium BC and that the Egyptians were fermenting date wine and ale at a similar time. The Sumerians had a goddess of brewing, Ninkasi, and a tablet inscribed with a verse singing her praises has been found at Nippur, dated to c 1800BC. It seems to describe Sumerian brewing methods; and this `recipe' was followed by Solomon Katz and Fritz Maytag of the Anchor Breweries of California in 1991, producing a drinkable and effective brew that was aptly called `Ninkasi'. More recently, Scottish and Newcastle Breweries, in association with researchers from Cambridge University, made Tutankhamun Ale, again a drinkable and sweet brew.

45. Council For British Archaeology
Organisation Council for british archaeology Contact Mike Heyworth Phone 01904671417 Fax 01904 671384 EMail info@britarch.ac.uk URL http//www.britarch
http://www.hants.gov.uk/istcclr/cch33091.html
Home Search Contacts A-Z Index ... Cousin is Hampshire County Council's directory of community organisations. Organisation: Council for British Archaeology Contact: Mike Heyworth Phone: 01904 671417 Fax: 01904 671384 E-Mail: info@britarch.ac.uk URL: http://www.britarch.ac.uk/
Want more information? Please contact the organisation direct.
About our maintenance policy Top of this page Hantsweb Homepage Search Cousin ...
Hantsweb
This page produced by the Hantsweb Team . Comments on Hantsweb should be sent to the Hantsweb Manager For more information on our services please contact Hampshire County Council Information Centres This page last updated on 25 March 2003. Hampshire County Council 2003. and Privacy Statement

46. British Archaeology Magazine 58, April 2001
An article by John Letts in british archaeology on the evidence of widespread survival of ancient thatch on vernacular buildings. History of thatching.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba58/feat1.shtml
Issue 58
April 2001
Contents
news
Earliest evidence of lead mining at Cwmystwyth Fine mosaic floor of Roman dining room preserved in London Defensive spikes point to Roman fear of the North ... In Brief
features
Medieval thatch
John Letts on the survival of medieval plants in thatch Finding the New Rome
Great sites

David Hinton on the 7th century royal site at Yeavering
comment
Voting for archaeology
Simon Denison on Archaeology and the General Election
letters
Cider and beer, Seahenge, Early metal, Water
issues
Why we must redefine 'treasure', by George Lambrick
Peter Ellis
Regular column
books
Circles of Stone by Max Milligan and Aubrey Burl Children and Material Culture edited by Joanna Sofaer Deverenski Wood and Woodworking in Anglo-Scandinavian and Medieval York by Caroel A Morris Air Photo Interpretation for Archaeologists by DR Wilson ...
CBA update
favourite finds
Long reach of the flint knappers. Mike Pitts's find links a Suffolk pub with a South Sea island. ISSN 1357-4442 Editor Simon Denison
features
Living under a medieval field
John Letts reports on the remarkable evidence for medieval cereal crops and weeds that survives in the thatched roofs of southern England 'Fful sooty was hir bour and eke hir halle' (Chaucer, The Nun's Priest's Tale)

47. British Archaeology Boost May Uncover Old Enthusiasm
27 September 2001. Nature 413, 338 (2001); doi10.1038/35096716. Britisharchaeology boost may uncover old enthusiasm DAVID ADAM. LONDON
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v413/n6854/full/

48. Nature Publishing Group
ERROR, There has been an error while processing your request. In mostcases, this is an isolated incident that can be overcome by
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v413/n6854/full/

49. Oxbow Books/David Brown Book Company
british archaeology. Browse Subject List Regional Great Britain british archaeologyThis category contains 35 books. Pick a title for further information.
http://www.oxbowbooks.com/browse.cfm?&CatID=279

50. British Archaeology, No 20, December 1996: Interview
Interview in british archaeology December 1996 with the Professor of Archaeology at Reading and noted British prehistorian.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba20/ba20int.html
British Archaeology , no 20, December 1996: Interview
Man of status, who wants it not
Simon Denison talks to Richard Bradley Few figures in archaeology command such respect as Richard Bradley, Professor of Archaeology at Reading. In a close-knit but sometimes catty discipline, he tends to be praised in superlatives. Colleagues have described him to me as `a real live wire', `a genius', and `the best British prehistorian for 20 years'. Moreover, these and other compliments have come unsolicited, suggesting he is as much liked as admired. So it was with some curiosity that I went to meet this man with such a reputation. What would he be like face to face? And would I end up writing hagiography? We met at his home, a modest Victorian terraced house in east Oxford. I saw him before he saw me, sitting by his front window, arms on his arm-rests, looking into the room - just waiting. I waved, and he ushered me in, a pullovered professor, to the same spot by the window. It was a darkish room, the bright November afternoon light cut out (`quite deliberately,' he said) by a thicket of bushes outside. We sat facing one another on wicker chairs amid sparse furnishings - a couple of sofas, a few small Victorian prints and paintings on the wall, some half-empty bookshelves, a single ceiling light, and a miniature TV on a tall stand. Whereas some interviewees relish putting their lives on show, and point out this and that in their homes, Richard Bradley seemed tense and apprehensive. His answers were full and direct, always helpful, but remained answers to questions - as in a job interview - rather than one half of a relaxed conversation. For this private, and probably not overly self-confident man, I suspect the meeting was a minor ordeal. Nonetheless, we got on to archaeology, and he talked fast and excitedly in a highish voice. His hands and eyebrows were always on the move; and time and again, apropos of nothing in particular, he grinned at me mid-sentence, mid-exposition, as if to help me along. His bubbling enthusiasm is his most obvious and appealing characteristic.

51. BUBL LINK: 936 Ancient History And Archaeology Of The British Isles: National Re
Service of CPAT Subjects british archaeology local, wales DeweyClass 936 ResourceTypedocuments Location uk Council for british archaeology The CBA works
http://link.bubl.ac.uk/ISC12214
BUBL LINK Catalogue of selected Internet resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
936 Ancient history and archaeology of the British Isles: national resources
Titles Descriptions
  • Archaeology Commissions
  • Archaeology Data Service
  • Archaeology of Ancient Ireland
  • ARCHSEARCH: Archaeological Holdings Search System ...
  • UK University Archaeology Departments
    All links checked August 2001 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    Archaeology Commissions
    Summaries of projects funded by the Archaeology Commission, grouped by financial year. Includes surveys, coastal audits, landscape assessments, excavation records, and a set of links to archaeology departments in universities throughout England.
    Author: English Heritage
    Subjects: british archaeology - general, british archaeology links
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents, index
    Location: uk
    Archaeology Data Service
    Aims to collect, describe, catalogue, preserve, and provide user support for digital resources that are created as a product of archaeological research. Part of the Arts and Humanities Data Service, based at the University of York. Author: Archaeology Data Service Subjects: archaeology research, british archaeology links, world archaeology
  • 52. BUBL LINK: 936 Ancient History And Archaeology Of The British Isles: Regional Re
    Author Hampshire County Council Subjects british archaeology local, british history- local DeweyClass 936 ResourceType document Location uk Birmingham
    http://link.bubl.ac.uk/ISC12215
    BUBL LINK Catalogue of selected Internet resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
    936 Ancient history and archaeology of the British Isles: regional resources
    Titles Descriptions
  • Ancient Scotland Tour
  • Archaeology in Hampshire
  • Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeological Society
  • Birmingham University Field Archaeology Unit ...
  • York Council's Archaeology Home Page
    All links checked August 2001 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    Ancient Scotland Tour
    Account of a SCRAN sponsored tour of more than 200 Scottish prehistoric sites which took place from May to July 1998, and resulted in a multimedia travel diary, images, maps, equipment specifications and a message board.
    Author: Paola Arosio and Diego Meozzi
    Subjects: scottish archaeology
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    documents
    Location: italy, europe
    Archaeology in Hampshire
    Provides archaeological advice and supports archaeological contractors in carrying out archaeological projects. Brief details about Hampshire surveys and an index of local sites by district and by period are available. Author: Hampshire County Council Subjects: british archaeology - local, british history - local
  • 53. Aecportico - Council For British Archaeology
    Council for british archaeology (CBA). The CBA works to promote thestudy and safeguarding of Britain's historic environment, to
    http://www.aecportico.co.uk/Directory/CBArc.shtm
    construction suffer from Iraq conflict, says NFB
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    demolition begins
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    rocks hurt construction worker
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    Dublin
    Airport to Get New Terminal
    Van raided

    Llewellyn
    Completes Sale Of Former Head Office In Eastbourne
    Thermalite
    Appoints New Sales Director

    Council for British Archaeology (CBA) The CBA works to promote the study and safeguarding of Britain's historic environment, to provide a forum for archaeological opinion, and to improve public interest in, and knowledge of, Britain's past. Contact details: Bowes Morrell House 111 Walmgate York Tel: 01904 671417 Fax: 01904 671384 Email: info@britarch.ac.uk URL: http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ Use aecportico to Search all of the World Wide Web: Categories Our Products Organisations Diary Last updated: 14 January 2003 NBS

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

    Guide
    : British Archaeology (GB)
    Thema
    Fundpunkt

    Nachrichten

    Presseschau
    ...
    3931 Links
    zur Archäologie in 573 Kategorien:
    Epochen

    Themen

    mehr...

    Neuvorstellungen
    ... Zufalls-Link
    Guide : Detailansicht
    British Archaeology (GB) Online-Version des Magazins des Council of British Archaeology . Enthalten sind sämtliche Beiträge seit Erscheinen 1995. Sprache: englisch Diesen Eintrag ...weiterempfehlen ...als fehlerhaft melden ...bewerten ...kommentieren Statistik für diesen Eintrag aufgenommen: Status: OK Hits: Der Eintrag wurde bisher 186 mal angeklickt Wertung: 9.00 von max. 10 Punkten, bei 1 abgegebenen Stimmen Kommentare: Zu diesem Eintrag wurde bisher kein Kommentar abgegeben. Empfehlungen: Der Eintrag wurde bisher noch nicht von Besuchern weiterempfohlen Dieser Eintrag ist in folgenden Kategorien vorhanden:

    55. Eintrag Bewerten: British Archaeology (GB) [Archäologie Online : Guide]
    Translate this page british archaeology (GB) Online-Version des Magazins des Council of BritishArchaeology. Enthalten sind sämtliche Beiträge seit Erscheinen 1995.
    http://www.archaeologie-online.de/cgi-bin/links2/rate.cgi?ID=582

    56. About Internet Archaeology
    Internet Archaeology's Advisory Committee is made up from representatives fromthe British Academy, Council for british archaeology and a range of leading
    http://intarch.ac.uk/news/
    About Internet Archaeology
    Internet Archaeology is an independent, not-for-profit, fully refereed electronic journal for archaeology and we have set ourselves the task of publishing articles of a high academic standing which also try to utilise the potential of electronic publication. Internet Archaeology's contents are archived for the long term by the Archaeology Data Service . No changes are made to articles post-publication. Since publishing the first issue in 1996, Internet Archaeology has been used by more than 27,000 individuals from over 120 countries. A subscription is required to access articles in the journal. To get a feel for the sort of content that is found across all our issues, take some time to browse content in Issue 1 which remains free for everyone. If you want to secure permanent access to the journal, see our subscriptions noticeboard for full details. People Editorial policy Background to the project Guidelines for Authors ... Subscription Information the intarch-interest list Guidelines for Referees Evaluation Reports Frequently Asked Questions Advertising in IA ... Management minutes
    (password-protected - for committee members only) Internet Archaeology is the first fully refereed e-journal for archaeology. Issues are published twice a year and we are interested in publishing a broad and international range of archaeological research articles that will appeal to everyone, from academic researchers to government agencies to interested members of the public.

    57. British Archaeology, No 26, July 1997: Interview
    Interview in british archaeology July 1997 with the groundbreaking fabric analyst and author of the standard textbook on church archaeology.
    http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba26/ba26int.html
    British Archaeology , no 26, July 1997: Interview
    Taking an aesthetic view of buildings
    Simon Denison talks to Warwick Rodwell The genesis of this interview was a letter that Warwick Rodwell, distinguished church archaeologist and historic buildings adviser, sent me in December last year. He wrote, apropos of something or other: Some people tend to accumulate more junk than others. Although we now live in an 18-room vicarage, with coach house, redundant church and former school in the grounds, they are all full up! To quote Gilbert Scott, we are `rammed, jammed, and crammed', but still collecting . . . I admit it. Most of the interviews in this series try to be at least vaguely topical, but this one was driven by pure curiosity. You might expect, or hope, a buildings adviser would live somewhere interesting himself; but a church and a school as well? That's pretty rare. So it was off to Somerset for lunch at the Rodwells' Regency vicarage, surrounded by tall dark trees dripping after heavy rain. Victorian in feel, the vicarage is a busy, multi-patterned place of striking interior design, full of Baroque furniture, re-used Church masonry, gilded plasterwork, clocks, candelabra, curiosities of all sorts. Warwick Rodwell, immensely relaxed and welcoming, tells me over sherry that he has been a collector most of his life, developing collector's luck at an early age. He points to a Roman glass jug he swopped as a schoolboy (probably for a couple of gobstoppers and a comic); a possible Minoan bronze bull's head he spotted in a box of junk; a pair of candlesticks that turned out to have been designed by Pugin . . . The list goes on. Most things in the house are from small-town auctions, junk-shops and skips - haunts of the enthusiast, not of the wealthy.

    58. Council For British Archaeology
    Council for british archaeology Address Bowes Morrell House 111 WalmgateYork YO1 9WA. Aims The advancement of the study and practise
    http://www.charitiesdirect.com/charity6/ch017256.htm
    Charities Advisers Top 500 Browse A-Z Auditors Investment Managers Banks Legal Advisers Insurance Brokers Property Advisers Stockbrokers Financial Advisers Recruitment Accounting Legal Investment Fundraising Browse All Charity products Corporate CD Products Mailing Lists Order Form Contact Use our exclusive adviser profiles and database to select the right adviser for your charity.
    Charity Events Our exclusive charity events page allows you to advertising your fundraising events for free on Charities Direct, the UK's most popular charity information website. Click here for further details.
    Offer of the month: Buy the Martin Currie Top 1000 Scottish Charities book, and get the CD-ROM free. See our bookshop for details Council for British Archaeology Key Statistics Total Income Total Funds Address: Bowes Morrell House
    111 Walmgate
    York
    Tel: Fax: CC registration: Constitution: Company. Coy reg no: ENG:1760254. Aims: The advancement of the study and practise of the archaeology of, or pertaining to, Great Britain and Northern Ireland and in particular to promote the education of the public in British archaeology and to conduct and publish the results of research therein Quick Search: Enter Charity Name: here

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

    60. The Defence Of Britain Project
    Volunteers under the wing of the Council for british archaeology aim to make a complete record of 20thcentury military structures and sites. Two newsletters on-line.
    http://www.britarch.ac.uk/projects/dob/dobintro.html
    The main web page for the Defence of Britain project has moved to: http://www.britarch.ac.uk/projects/dob/index.html

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