Open Directory - Science: Social Sciences: Archaeology: Methodology
See also: This category in other languages: - Survey management program for underwater archaeology. Download manuals and reports. Features product information and company news. - Discussion of all aspects of experimental archaeology and archaeological reconstructions especially focused on groups carrying out experimental archaeology in Britain. - Mailing list for international discussions, reviews, and exchanges of information in archaeological theory and associated fields of interest. - Moderated discussion list whose purpose is to provide a venue for discussing archaeological and anthropological theory and archaeological methodology. - The archaeological heritage of each city, the result of slow stratification, is limited and has a tendency to disappear in the course of new building construction and new developments. - Site dedicated to archaeology and its practice. Methodological approach and illustraded archaeology. Rescue archaeology, programmed archaeology, a legal approach, and also archaeology and law. - Geophysical Survey Systems Inc. explain the technology and use of geophysical survey methods in archeology for non-invasively mapping the subsurface and features within it. - From Guardian Unlimited, treating myth as fact misunderstands the meaning of religion. - Provides information on the numerous laboratories and research groups at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles, USA. - Information on the study of microscopic wear on teeth and free image analysis software. - An essay by Dr Peter Reynolds, Director of Butser Ancient Farm, 'The Nature of Experiment in Archaeology'. - Archaeological practices and their effect on Geophysical survey results, with suggestions for new standards. - Political Economy of World-Systems 2002 Conference article by Mitch Allen. The expansion of the Ancient Near Eastern core has been addressed by world-systems scholars for two decades now, since it represented the earliest documented case of strong core and peripheral differentiation. - A response to Vansina's article, "Historians, are archaeologists your siblings?". - Account by the European Commission of analysis of objects from the Bronze Age, Iron Age and Roman times to determine the composition of the alloys used by these civilisations.