Alluvial Geoarchaeology
This comprehensive manual is designed to give archaeologists the necessary background knowledge in environmental science required to excavate and analyse archaeological sites by rivers and on floodplains. Part I covers the techniques for studying alluvial environments, while Part II reviews the literature on the archaeology of alluvial environments and presents new information on alluviation and site formation in both the British Isles and Mediterranean. An important theme running through the book is the interaction between climatic and cultural forces and the transformation of riverine environments. Bringing together information on the evolution and exploitation of floodplain and river landscapes, it draws on examples from Britain, Europe, North America and Australasia. Alluvial Geoarchaeology will also interest physical geographers, geologists and environmental scientists.
- Both methodological and chronological
- Not technically demanding
- Particularly comprehensively referenced and indexed
Product details
February 2011Adobe eBook Reader
9780511821769
0 pages
0kg
29 b/w illus.
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction and the example of the Nile
- Part I. Principles:
- 1. Floodplain evolution
- 2. Alluvial environments over time
- 3. Interpreting floodplain sediments and soils
- 4. Floodplain ecology, archaeobotany and archaeozoology
- Part II. Application:
- 5. Artifacts from floodplains and rivers
- 6. The rise and fall of forested floodplains in North West Europe
- 7. Buried sites
- 8. Managed floodplains
- 9. The cultural archaeology of floodplains
- 10. People, floodplains and environmental change
- Appendices:
- 1. River flow and sediment transport
- 2. Flood frequency analysis
- 3. Documentary evidence and wetland perceptions
- References
- Subject index.