Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)

In the last quarter of the 1900s, John Coles (1979) and Peter Reynolds (1999) introduced the subject of experimental archaeology, which has gained significant momentumin the past few years. The discipline has become essential for reconstructing past technologies, in addition to supporting archaeolog...

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Main Author: E. Giovanna Fregni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2016-02-01
Series:EXARC Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10226
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spelling doaj-78ea33fff62c458ab07da4997f8fde4a2021-06-15T15:28:51ZengEXARCEXARC Journal2212-89562016-02-012016/1ark:/88735/10226Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)E. Giovanna FregniIn the last quarter of the 1900s, John Coles (1979) and Peter Reynolds (1999) introduced the subject of experimental archaeology, which has gained significant momentumin the past few years. The discipline has become essential for reconstructing past technologies, in addition to supporting archaeological theory. For this reason, experimental archaeology has become increasingly popular in academic programmes, with masters and PhDs being offered on the subject at several universities in the United Kingdom, as well as being taught as a study unit within the undergraduate degree programme. These programmes not only provide a hands-on approach for interacting with archaeological material, but also give students grounded knowledge on past technologies.https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10226experimental archaeologytheorymethods and techniquespalaeolithicmesolithicneolithicchalcolithicbronze ageiron ageroman eraviking ageearly middle ageslate middle agesnewer eranewest eraunited kingdombookreview
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E. Giovanna Fregni
spellingShingle E. Giovanna Fregni
Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)
EXARC Journal
experimental archaeology
theory
methods and techniques
palaeolithic
mesolithic
neolithic
chalcolithic
bronze age
iron age
roman era
viking age
early middle ages
late middle ages
newer era
newest era
united kingdom
book
review
author_facet E. Giovanna Fregni
author_sort E. Giovanna Fregni
title Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)
title_short Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)
title_full Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)
title_fullStr Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)
title_full_unstemmed Book Review: Recent Publications: Experimental Archaeology in the November 2015 Issue of the Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Volume 25, Issue 4)
title_sort book review: recent publications: experimental archaeology in the november 2015 issue of the cambridge archaeological journal (volume 25, issue 4)
publisher EXARC
series EXARC Journal
issn 2212-8956
publishDate 2016-02-01
description In the last quarter of the 1900s, John Coles (1979) and Peter Reynolds (1999) introduced the subject of experimental archaeology, which has gained significant momentumin the past few years. The discipline has become essential for reconstructing past technologies, in addition to supporting archaeological theory. For this reason, experimental archaeology has become increasingly popular in academic programmes, with masters and PhDs being offered on the subject at several universities in the United Kingdom, as well as being taught as a study unit within the undergraduate degree programme. These programmes not only provide a hands-on approach for interacting with archaeological material, but also give students grounded knowledge on past technologies.
topic experimental archaeology
theory
methods and techniques
palaeolithic
mesolithic
neolithic
chalcolithic
bronze age
iron age
roman era
viking age
early middle ages
late middle ages
newer era
newest era
united kingdom
book
review
url https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10226
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