Identity as process : an archaeological and osteological study of Early Bronze Age burials in northern England
Osteological and archaeological approaches are brought together to investigate questions on the mortuary practices, health, demography, identities, and chronology of Early Bronze Age burials in northern England. Processes of life, death and burial are identified as a way of evaluating the lifecourse...
Main Author: | Walsh, Samantha |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Central Lancashire
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.686400 |
Similar Items
-
The prehistoric burial chambers of England and Wales
by: Daniel, Glyn Edmund
Published: (1938) -
Late Bronze Age metal work in the south of England : typology, associations, distribution, chronology and industrial traditions
by: Coombs, D. G.
Published: (1971) -
The execution and burial of criminals in early medieval England, c. 850-1150 : an examination of changes in judicial punishment across the Norman Conquest
by: Mattison, Alyxandra
Published: (2016) -
Holes in the archaeological record : investigating unpublished sites from modern excavations in England and identifying the factors that contribute to the potential loss of archaeological knowledge
by: Evans, Timothy
Published: (2015) -
Life with the stones : monuments, fields, settlement and social practice : revealing the hidden Neolithic-Early Bronze Age landscapes of Exmoor, SW Britain
by: Mitcham, Douglas James
Published: (2017)