1.
STRAND A - TECHNOLOGY WITHIN SOCIETY .
2.
Appadurai, Arjun. The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. (Cambridge University Press, 1986).
3.
Caple, Chris. Objects: reluctant witnesses to the past. (Routledge, 2006).
4.
Ewen, Charles Robin. Artifacts. vol. Archaeologist’s toolkit (AltaMira Press, 2003).
5.
Hurcombe, L. M. Archaeological artefacts as material culture. (Routledge, 2007).
6.
Jones, A. Archaeometry and materiality: materials-based analysis in theory and practice. Archaeometry 46, 327–338 (2004).
7.
Kingery, W. D. Learning from things: method and theory of material culture studies. (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1996).
8.
Latour, Bruno. Pandora’s hope: essays on the reality of science studies. (Harvard University Press, 1999).
9.
Lemonnier, P. The study of material culture today: Toward an anthropology of technical systems. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology (1986) doi:0278-4165(86)90012-7.
10.
Miller, Heather Margaret-Louise. Archaeological approaches to technology. (Elsevier/Academic Press, 2007).
11.
Nanoglou, S. Qualities of Humanness: Material Aspects of Greek Neolithic Anthropomorphic Imagery. Journal of Material Culture 13, 311–334 (2008).
12.
Olsen, Bjørnar. In defense of things: archaeology and the ontology of objects. vol. Archaeology in society series (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2010).
13.
Schiffer, Michael B. & Miller, Andrea R. The material life of human beings: artifacts, behavior, and communication. (Routledge, 1999).
14.
Sigaut, F. Technology. in Companion encyclopedia of anthropology vol. Routledge world reference 420–459 (Routledge, 2002).
15.
Tilley, Christopher Y. Handbook of material culture. (SAGE, 2006).
16.
Thornton, C. Archaeometallurgy. in Metals and societies: studies in honour of Barbara S. Ottaway vol. Universitätsforschungen zur prähistorischen Archäologie 25–33 (R. Habelt, 2009).
17.
Boivin, Nicole. Material cultures, material minds: the impact of things on human thought, society, and evolution. (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
18.
Dant, Tim. Material culture in the social world: values, activities, lifestyles. (Open Univeristy Press, 1999).
19.
Henare, Amiria J. M., Holbraad, Martin, & Wastell, Sari. Thinking through things: theorising artefacts ethnographically. (Routledge, 2007).
20.
Lubar, Steven D. & Kingery, W. D. History from things: essays on material culture. (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993).
21.
Meskell, Lynn. Archaeologies of materiality. (Blackwell, 2006).
22.
Miller, Daniel. Materiality. (Duke University Press, 2005).
23.
Andrefsky, William. Lithics: macroscopic approaches to analysis. vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
24.
Henderson, Julian. The science and archaeology of materials: an investigation of inorganic materials. (Routledge, 2000).
25.
Orton, Clive & Hughes, Mike. Pottery in archaeology. vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
26.
Rice, Prudence M. Pottery analysis: a sourcebook. (University of Chicago Press, 1987).
27.
Schick, Kathy Diane & Toth, Nicholas Patrick. Making silent stones speak: human evolution and the dawn of technology. (Phoenix, 1993).
28.
Ingold, T. Materials against materiality. Archaeological Dialogues 14, (2007).
29.
Kopytoff, I. The cultural biology of things: commoditization as a process. in The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective 64–94 (Cambridge University Press, 1986).
30.
Meskell, Lynn. Object worlds in ancient Egypt: material biographies past and present. vol. Materializing culture (Berg, 2004).
31.
Meskell, L. Introduction, object orientations. in Archaeologies of materiality 1–17 (Blackwell, 2006). doi:10.1002/9780470774052.ch1.
32.
Olsen, Bjørnar. In defense of things: archaeology and the ontology of objects. vol. Archaeology in society series (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2010).
33.
Adams, W. Y. Archaeological classification: theory versus practice. Antiquity 56, 40–56 (1988).
34.
Michael S. Bisson. Nineteenth Century Tools for Twenty-First Century Archaeology? Why the Middle Paleolithic Typology of François Bordes Must Be Replaced. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7, 1–48 (2000).
35.
Brian Hayden. Are Emic Types Relevant to Archaeology? Ethnohistory 31, 79–92 (1984).
36.
Adams, William Yewdale & Adams, Ernest W. Archaeological typology and practical reality: a dialectical approach to artifact classification and sorting. (Cambridge University Press, 1991).
37.
Barrett, J. C. Bronze Age pottery and the problem of classification. in Papers on the prehistoric archaeology of Cranborne Chase vol. Oxbow monograph 201–230 (Oxbow, 1991).
38.
Biers, William R. Art, artefacts, and chronology in classical archaeology. vol. Approaching the ancient world (Routledge, 1992).
39.
Lewis R. Binford. Archaeology as Anthropology. American Antiquity 28, 217–225 (1962).
40.
Binford, L. R. Archaeological perspectives. in New perspectives in archaeology 155–186 (Aldine, 1968).
41.
Buck, Caitlin E. & Millard, Andrew. Tools for constructing chronologies: crossing disciplinary boundaries. vol. Lecture notes in statistics (Springer, 2004).
42.
Caple, Chris. Objects: reluctant witnesses to the past. (Routledge, 2006).
43.
Carver, M. O. H. Theory and practice in urban pottery seriation. Journal of Archaeological Science 12, 353–366 (1985).
44.
Chapman, W. R. Arranging ethnology: A.H.L.F. Pitt Rivers and the typological tradition. in Objects and others : essays on museums and material culture 15–48 (1985).
45.
Clarke, David L. Analytical archaeologist: collected papers of David L. Clarke. vol. Studies in archeology (Academic Press, 1979).
46.
Cumberpatch, C. G. Towards a phenomenological approach to medieval pottery. in Not so much a pot, more a way of life : current approaches to artefact analysis in archaeology 125–152 (1997).
47.
Dunnell, R. C. Methodological issues in Americanist artifact classification. Advances in archaeological method and theory 9, 149–207 (1986).
48.
Fish, P. R. Consistency in Archaeological Measurement and Classification: A Pilot Study. American Antiquity 43, 86–89 (1978).
49.
Gräslund, Bo. The birth of prehistoric chronology: dating methods and dating systems in nineteenth-century Scandinavian archaeology. vol. New studies in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 1987).
50.
Ian Hodder. The Narrative and Rhetoric of Material Culture Sequences. World Archaeology 25, 268–282 (1993).
51.
Kempton, Willett. The folk classification of ceramics: a study of cognitive prototypes. vol. Language, thought, and culture (Academic Press, 1981).
52.
Margolis, Eric & Laurence, Stephen. Creations of the mind: theories of artifacts and their representation. (Oxford University Press, 2007).
53.
Miller, D. Artefacts as products of human categorisation processes. in Symbolic and structural archaeology 17–25 (Cambridge University Press, 1982).
54.
Miller, Daniel. Artefacts as categories: a study of ceramic variability in central India. vol. New studies in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 1985).
55.
Stephen Plog. Analysis of Style in Artifacts. Annual Review of Anthropology 12, 125–142 (1983).
56.
Stephen Plog and Jeffrey L. Hantman. Chronology Construction and the Study of Prehistoric Culture Change. Journal of Field Archaeology 17, 439–456 (1990).
57.
Read, Dwight W. Artifact classification: a conceptual and methodological approach. (Left Coast Press, 2007).
58.
Prudence M. Rice. Rethinking the Ware Concept. American Antiquity 41, 538–543 (1976).
59.
Sackett, J. Approaches to style in lithic archaeology. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 59–112 (1982) doi:0278-4165(82)90008-3.
60.
Schnapp, A. Between antiquarians and archaeologists--continuities and ruptures. Antiquity 76, 134–140 (2002).
61.
Wendrich, W. The World According to Basketry. (1999).
62.
Wheat, J. B. Ceramic classification: Bradfield and Shepard, types and varieties. in The ceramic legacy of Anna O. Shepard 121–131 (University Press of Colorado, 1991).
63.
White, J. P. & Thomas, D. H. What mean these stones? Ethnotaxonomic models and archaeological interpretations in the New Guinea Highlands. in Models in archaeology (ed. Clarke, D. L.) 275–308 (1972).
64.
Widemann, F. Why is archaeometry so boring for archaeologists? in Archaeological ceramics : papers presented at a seminar on Ceramics as Archaeological Material held at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. and the National Bureau of Standards, Gaithersburg, Maryland, 29 September-1 October 1980, one of the Smithsonian Institution/National Bureau of Standards seminars on the Application of the Materials and Measurement Sciences to Archaeology and Museum Conservation 29–36 (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1982).
65.
Wylie, A. The typology debate. in Thinking from things: essays in the philosophy of archaeology 42–56 (University of California Press, 2002).
66.
Benco, N. L. Worked bone tools: Linking metal artisans and animal processors in medieval Islamic Morocco. Antiquity 76, 447–457 (2002).
67.
Schlanger, N. The chaîne opératoire. in Archaeology : the key concepts 25–31 (Routledge, 2005).
68.
SILLAR, B. & TITE, M. S. THE CHALLENGE OF ‘TECHNOLOGICAL CHOICES’FOR MATERIALS SCIENCE APPROACHES IN ARCHAEOLOGY. Archaeometry 42, 2–20 (2000).
69.
Françoise Audouze. Leroi-Gourhan, a Philosopher of Technique and Evolution. Journal of Archaeological Research 10, 277–306 (2002).
70.
Bar‐Yosef, O. & Van Peer, P. The Chaine Operatoire Approach in Middle Paleolithic Archaeology. Current Anthropology 50, 103–131 (2009).
71.
Dobres, M.-A. Technology’s links and chaînes : the processual unfolding of technique and technician. in The social dynamics of technology : practice, politics, and world views 124–146 (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1999).
72.
Binford, L. R. Hunters in a landscape. in In pursuit of the past: decoding the archaeological record 109–143 (Thames and Hudson, 1983).
73.
Chanteller, C. Lithic technology and the Chaîne Opératoire. in Prehistoric Britain vol. Blackwell studies in global archaeology 160–176 (Blackwell, 2008).
74.
Collins, M. B. Lithic technology as a means of processual inference. in Lithic technology: making and using stone tools vol. World anthropology 15–34 (Mouton, 1975).
75.
Crabtree, D. E. Comments of lithic technology and experimental archaeology. in Lithic technology: making and using stone tools vol. World anthropology 105–113 (Mouton, 1975).
76.
David, N. & Kramer, C. Studying artifacts: functions, operating sequences, taxonomy. in Ethnoarchaeology in action vol. Cambridge world archaeology 138–167 (Cambridge University Press, 2001).
77.
Elizabeth DeMarrais, Luis Jaime Castillo and Timothy Earle. Ideology, Materialization, and Power Strategies. Current Anthropology 37, 15–31 (1996).
78.
Chris Gosden and Yvonne Marshall. The Cultural Biography of Objects. World Archaeology 31, 169–178 (1999).
79.
Holtorf, C. Notes on the Life History of a Pot Sherd. Journal of Material Culture 7, 49–71 (2002).
80.
Hoskins, Janet. Biographical objects: how things tell the stories of people’s lives. (Routledge, 1998).
81.
Hurcombe, L. Plant processing for cordage and textiles using serrated flint edges: new chaines operatoires suggested by ethnographic, archaeological and experimental evidence for bast fibre processing. in Plant processing form a prehistoric and ethnographic perspective =: Préhistoire et ethnographie du travail des plantes : proceedings of a workshop at Ghent University (Belgium) November 28, 2006 vol. BAR international series 41–66 (John & Erica Hedges, 2007).
82.
Ingold, T. `Tools for the Hand, Language for the Face’: An Appreciation of Leroi-Gourhan’s Gesture and Speech. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 30, 411–453 (1999).
83.
Jennings, J. et al. "Drinking Beer in a Blissful Mood” Alcohol Production, Operational Chains, and Feasting in the Ancient World. Current Anthropology 46, 275–303 (2005).
84.
Lemonnier, Pierre. Elements for an anthropology of technology. vol. Anthropological papers / Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan (Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, 1992).
85.
Lucas, G. Case study: the life and times of a Roman jar. in The archaeology of time vol. Themes in archaeology 95–113 (Routledge, 2005).
86.
Meskell, Lynn. Object worlds in ancient Egypt: material biographies past and present. vol. Materializing culture (Berg, 2004).
87.
Rye, Owen S. Pottery technology: principles and reconstruction. vol. Manuals on archeology (Taraxacum, 1981).
88.
Shanks, M. The life of an artefact in an interpretive archaeology. http://documents.stanford.edu/michaelshanks/229.
89.
Schiffer, M. B. Behavioral chain analysis: activities, organization and the use of space. in Behavioral archaeology: first principles vol. Foundations of archaeological inquiry 103–174 (University of Utah Press, 1995).
90.
Schlanger, N. Mindful technology: unleashing the chaîne opératoire for an archaeology of mind. in The ancient mind: elements of cognitive archaeology vol. New directions in archaeology 143–151 (Cambridge University Press, 1994).
91.
Schlanger, N. & Silclair, A. Technology in the Humanities. Archaeological review from Cambridge 9, 3–167 (1990).
92.
Skibo, J. M. & Schiffer, M. B. Understanding artifact variability and change: a behavioral framework. in Anthropological perspectives on technology vol. Amerind Foundation New World studies series 139–149 (University of New Mexico Press, 2001).
93.
Vidale, M. Operational sequences beyond linearity. in Papers from the EAA Third Annual Meeting at Ravenna 1997 vol. BAR international series 179–184 (Archaeopress, 1998).
94.
Rapp, George Robert. Archaeomineralogy. vol. Natural science in archaeology (Springer, 2009).
95.
Ashurst, John, Dimes, Francis G., & Honeyborne, D. B. Conservation of building and decorative stone: Vol. 1. vol. Butterworths series in conservation and museology (Butterworths, 1990).
96.
Bachmann, H. G. The identification of slags from archaeological sites. vol. Occasional publication (Institute of Archaeology, 1982).
97.
Bayley, J., Dungworth, D. & Paynter, S. Centre for Archaeology Guidelines: Archaeometallurgy. (English Heritage, 2001).
98.
Leo Biek and Justine Bayley. Glass and other Vitreous Materials. World Archaeology 11, 1–25 (1979).
99.
Freestone, Ian & Gaimster, David R. M. Pottery in the making: world ceramic traditions. (British Museum Press, 1997).
100.
Gleba, Margarita. Textile production in pre-Roman Italy. vol. Ancient textiles series (Oxbow Books, 2008).
101.
Hurcombe, L. M. Archaeological artefacts as material culture. (Routledge, 2007).
102.
Orton, Clive & Hughes, Mike. Pottery in archaeology. vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
103.
Paynter, S. & Dungworth, D. Archaeological Evidence for Glassworking. (English Heritage, 2011).
104.
Thomson, Roy & Mould, Quita. Leather tanneries: the archaeological evidence. (Archetype, 2011).
105.
Tomber, R. et al. The National Roman Fabric Reference Collection: a handbook. vol. MoLAS monograph (Museum of London Archaeology Service, 1998).
106.
BGS Rock Classification Scheme - British Geological Survey. http://www.bgs.ac.uk/bgsrcs/.
107.
Archaeological Geology of Ancient Egypt. http://www.eeescience.utoledo.edu/Faculty/Harrell/Egypt/AGRG_Home.html.
108.
Utilitarian Stones. http://escholarship.org/uc/item/77t294df#page-1 (2012).
109.
Building Stones. http://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fd124g0?query=building%20stones#page-1 (2012).
110.
Pigments through the Ages - detailed pigment histories, recipes. http://www.webexhibits.org/pigments/.
111.
Mineralogy Database - Mineral Collecting, Localities, Mineral Photos and Data. http://www.mindat.org/.
112.
Freestone, I. Chapter 4: Pliny on Roman glassmaking. in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 77–100 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
113.
Freestone, I., Huges, M. & Stapleton, C. The composition and production of Anglo-Saxon glass. in Catalogue of Anglo-Saxon glass in the British Museum vol. British Museum research publication 29–46 (British Museum, 2008).
114.
Paynter, S. & Dungworth, D. Archaeological Evidence for Glassworking. (English Heritage, 2011).
115.
Price, J. & Cottam, Sally. Romano-British glass vessels: a handbook. vol. Practical handbooks in archaeology (Council for British Archaeology, 1998).
116.
Strand, E. A. et al. Old Textiles -- New Possibilities. European Journal of Archaeology 13, 149–173 (2010).
117.
Barber, E. J. W. Prehistoric textiles: the development of cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with special reference to the Aegean. (Princeton University Press, 1991).
118.
Jørgensen, Lise Bender. North European textiles until AD 1000. (Aarhus University Press, 1992).
119.
Gleba, Margarita & Mannering, Ulla. Textiles & textile production in Europe: from prehistory to AD 400. vol. Ancient textiles series (Oxbow, 2012).
120.
Harris, S. Smooth and cool or warm and soft, investigating the properties of cloth in prehistory. | Susanna Harris - Academia.edu. in In North European Symposium for Archaeological Textiles X (ed. Strand, A.) vol. 5 (Oxbow Books, 2010).
121.
Technological examination of Neolithic-Bronze Age pottery from central and southeast Europe and from the Near East. Journal of Archaeological Science (1981) doi:0305-4403(81)90012-1.
122.
Orton, Clive & Hughes, Mike. Pottery in archaeology. vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
123.
Quinn, Patrick S. Ceramic petrography: the interpretation of archaeological pottery & related artefacts in thin section. (Archaeopress, 2013).
124.
Radivojević, M. et al. On the origins of extractive metallurgy: new evidence from Europe. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 2775–2787 (2010).
125.
Beckmann, H. Sophisticated Roman recovery techniques for gold. IAMS Newsletter 19, 7–9 (1995).
126.
Bachmann, H. G. The identification of slags from archaeological sites. vol. Occasional publication (Institute of Archaeology, 1982).
127.
Bayley, J., Dungworth, D. & Paynter, S. Centre for Archaeology Guidelines: Archaeometallurgy. (English Heritage, 2001).
128.
Rehren, T., Schneider, J. & Bartels, C. Medieval lead-silver smelting in the Siegerland, West Germany. Historical metallurgy: journal of the Historical Metallurgy Society 33, (1999).
129.
Wagner, D. Introductory orientations: the traditional Chinese iron industry in recent centuries. in Science and civilisation in China: Volume 5: Chemistry and chemical technology 5–72 (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
130.
Killick, D. & Fenn, T. Archaeometallurgy: The Study of Preindustrial Mining and Metallurgy. Annual Review of Anthropology 41, 559–575 (2012).
131.
Andrefsky, William. Lithics: macroscopic approaches to analysis. vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
132.
Mesoudi, A. Cultural Evolution: How Darwinian Theory Can Explain Human Culture and Synthesize the Social Sciences. (University of Chicago Press, 2011).
133.
Schick, Kathy Diane & Toth, Nicholas Patrick. Making silent stones speak: human evolution and the dawn of technology. (Phoenix, 1993).
134.
Whittaker, John C. Flintknapping: making and understanding stone tools. (University of Texas Press, 1994).
135.
Benito-Calvo, A. & de la Torre, I. Analysis of orientation patterns in Olduvai Bed I assemblages using GIS techniques: Implications for site formation processes. Journal of Human Evolution 61, 50–60 (2011).
136.
Bevan, A. Spatial methods for analysing large-scale artefact inventories. Antiquity 86, 492–506 (2012).
137.
Martinón-Torres, M. et al. Making Weapons for the Terracotta Army. Archaeology International 13, (2011).
138.
Tilley, C., Hamilton, S., Harrison, S. & Anderson, E. Nature, Culture, Clitter: Distinguishing Between Cultural and Geomorphological Landscapes; The Case of Hilltop Tors in South-West England. Journal of Material Culture 5, 197–224 (2000).
139.
Blankholm, H. P. Intrasite spatial analysis in theory and practice. (Aarhus University Press, 1991).
140.
BRUGHMANS, T. CONNECTING THE DOTS: TOWARDS ARCHAEOLOGICAL NETWORK ANALYSIS. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 29, 277–303 (2010).
141.
Hietala, Harold J. Intrasite spatial analysis in archaeology. vol. New directions in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 1984).
142.
Hodder, Ian & Orton, Clive. Spatial analysis in archaeology. vol. New studies in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 1976).
143.
Katsianis, M., Tsipidis, S., Kotsakis, K. & Kousoulakou, A. A 3D digital workflow for archaeological intra-site research using GIS. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 655–667 (2008).
144.
Kroll, Ellen M., Price, T. Douglas, & Society for American Archaeology. The interpretation of archaeological spatial patterning. vol. Interdisciplinary contributions to archaeology (Plenum Press, 1991).
145.
Livingood, P. C. & Cordell, A. S. Point/counter point: the accuracy and feasibility of digital image techniques in the analysis of ceramic thin sections. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 867–872 (2009).
146.
Vanzetti et al., A. The iceman as a burial. Antiquity 84, 681–692 (2010).
147.
Cathy Lynne Costin. Craft Specialization: Issues in Defining, Documenting, and Explaining the Organization of Production. Archaeological Method and Theory 3, 1–56 (1991).
148.
Peacock, D. P. Towards a model for Roman pottery studies. in Pottery in the Roman world: an ethnoarchaeological approach vol. Longman archaeology series 6–11 (Longman, 1982).
149.
Katherine A. Spielmann. Feasting, Craft Specialization, and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small-Scale Societies. American Anthropologist 104, 195–207 (2002).
150.
M. James Blackman, Gil J. Stein and Pamela B. Vandiver. The Standardization Hypothesis and Ceramic Mass Production: Technological, Compositional, and Metric Indexes of Craft Specialization at Tell Leilan, Syria. American Antiquity 58, 60–80 (1993).
151.
Burri, E. Production and use: temper as a marker of domestic production in the case of two middle Neolithic villages in Concise. in Archaeometric and archaeological approaches to ceramics: papers presented at EMAC ’05, 8th European meeting on ancient ceramics, Lyon 2005 vol. BAR international series 33–39 (Archaeopress, 2007).
152.
Castanzo, R. A. Ceramics on the Side: Pottery Making as an Augmentation of Household Economy in the Valley of Puebla during the Formative Period. Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 19, 133–147 (2009).
153.
Cathy Lynne Costin. The Use of Ethnoarchaeology for the Archaeological Study of Ceramic Production. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7, 377–403 (2000).
154.
Freestone, I. Glass production in Late Antiquity and the Early Islamic period: a geochemical perspective. Geomaterials in cultural heritage 201–216 (2006).
155.
Freestone, I. Pliny on Roman glassmaking. in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 77–100 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
156.
Freestone, I., Price, J. & Cartwright, C. The batch: its recognition and significance. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 130–135 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
157.
Freestone, Ian & Gaimster, David R. M. Pottery in the making: world ceramic traditions. (British Museum Press, 1997).
158.
Haines, H. R., Feinman, G. M. & Nicholas, L. M. HOUSEHOLD ECONOMIC SPECIALIZATION AND SOCIAL DIFFERENTIATION: The stone-tool assemblage at El Palmillo, Oaxaca. Ancient Mesoamerica 15, 251–266 (2004).
159.
Henderson, J., McLoughlin, S. D. & McPhail, D. S. Radical changes in Islamic glass technology: evidence for conservatism and experimentation with new glass recipes from early and middle Islamic Raqqa, Syria. Archaeometry 46, 439–468 (2004).
160.
Henderson et al., J. Experiment and innovation: early Islamic industry at al-Raqqa, Syria. Antiquity 79, 130–145 (2005).
161.
Hodder, Ian & McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. Changing materialities at Çatalhöyük: reports from the 1995-99 seasons. vol. McDonald Institute monographs (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2005).
162.
Humphris, J., Martinón-Torres, M., Rehren, T. & Reid, A. Variability in single smelting episodes – a pilot study using iron slag from Uganda. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 359–369 (2009).
163.
Martinón-Torres, M. et al. Forty Thousand Arms for a Single Emperor: From Chemical Data to the Labor Organization Behind the Bronze Arrows of the Terracotta Army. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory (2012) doi:10.1007/s10816-012-9158-z.
164.
Peacock, D. P. S. & University of Southampton. Rome in the desert: a symbol of power. (University of Southampton, 1992).
165.
Poblome, J. et al. The Concept of a Pottery Production Centre. An Archaeometrical Contribution from Ancient Sagalassos. Journal of Archaeological Science 29, 873–882 (2002).
166.
Rehren, T., Pusch, E. & Herold, A. Glass coloring works within a copper-centered industrial complex in Late Bronze Age Egypt. in The prehistory & history of glassmaking technology vol. Ceramics and civilization 227–250 (American Ceramic Society, 1998).
167.
Rehren, T., Pusch, E. & Herold, A. Qantir-Piramesses and the organisation of the Egyptian glass industry. in The social context of technological change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650-1550 B.C. : proceedings of a conference held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 12-14 September 2000 223–238 (Oxbow, 2001).
168.
Rehren, T. & Martinon-Torres, M. Naturam ars imitata: European brassmaking between craft and science. in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 167–188 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
169.
Prudence M. Rice, William Y. Adams, Joseph W. Ball, Whitney M. Davis, Timothy Earle, Robert E. Fry, Ian Hodder, L. R. V. Joesink-Mandeville, Charles C. Kolb, Masae Nishimura, Yasushi Kojo, Miguel Rivera Dorado, Barbara L. Stark and Sander E. Van Der Leeuw. Evolution of Specialized Pottery Production: A Trial Model [and Comments and Reply]. Current Anthropology 22, 219–240 (1981).
170.
Prudence M. Rice. Recent Ceramic Analysis: 2. Composition, Production, and Theory. Journal of Archaeological Research 4, 165–202 (1996).
171.
Prudence M. Rice. Late Classic Maya Pottery Production: Review and Synthesis. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 16, 117–156 (2009).
172.
Valentine Roux. Ceramic Standardization and Intensity of Production: Quantifying Degrees of Specialization. American Antiquity 68, 768–782 (2003).
173.
Shennan, S. Cost, benefit and value in the organization of early European copper production. Antiquity 73, 352–363 (1999).
174.
Shortland, A. J. The Number, Extent and Distribution of the Vitreous Materials Workshops at Amarna. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 19, 115–134 (2000).
175.
Shortland, A., Nicholson, P. & Jackson, C. Glass and faience at Amarna: different methods of both supply for production and subsequent distribution. in The social context of technological change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650-1550 B.C. : proceedings of a conference held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 12-14 September 2000 (Oxbow, 2001).
176.
Beck, M. E. Midden Ceramic Assemblage Formation: A Case Study from Kalinga, Philippines. American Antiquity 71, 27–51 (2006).
177.
Hardy-Smith, T. & Edwards, P. C. The Garbage Crisis in prehistory: artefact discard patterns at the Early Natufian site of Wadi Hammeh 27 and the origins of household refuse disposal strategies. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 23, 253–289 (2004).
178.
Schiffer, M. B. Chapter 1: The nature of archaeological evidence: Chapter 2: The dimensions of artifact variability. in Formation processes of the archaeological record 3–23 (University of New Mexico Press, 1987).
179.
Needham, Stuart et al. Refuse and disposal at Area 16 East, Runnymede. vol. Runnymede Bridge research excavations (Trustees of the British Museum, 1996).
180.
Lewis R. Binford. Behavioral Archaeology and the ‘Pompeii Premise’. Journal of Anthropological Research 37, 195–208 (1981).
181.
Richard Bradley. The Destruction of Wealth in Later Prehistory. Man 17, 108–122 (1982).
182.
Carmen, J. Commodities, rubbish and treasure: valuing archaeological objects. Archaeological review from Cambridge 9, 195–207 (1990).
183.
Chapman, John. Fragmentation in archaeology: people, places, and broken objects in the prehistory of south-eastern Europe. (Routledge, 2000).
184.
Chapman, John & Gaydarska, Bisserka. Parts and wholes: fragmentation in prehistoric context. (Oxbow Books, 2007).
185.
Deal, M. Household pottery disposal in the Maya highlands: An ethnoarchaeological interpretation. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 243–291 (1985) doi:0278-4165(85)90008-X.
186.
Deal, M. & Hagstrum, M. B. Ceramic reuse behavior among the Maya and Wanka: implications for archaeology. in Expanding archaeology 111–125 (University of Utah Press, 1995).
187.
Hayden, B. & Cannon, A. Where the garbage goes: Refuse disposal in the Maya Highlands. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 117–163 (1983) doi:0278-4165(83)90010-7.
188.
Hill, J. D. Ritual and rubbish in the Iron Age of Wessex: a study on the formation of a specific archaeological record. vol. BAR British series (Tempus Reparatum, 1995).
189.
Hutson, S. R. & Stanton, T. W. Cultural Logic and Practical Reason: the Structure of Discard in Ancient Maya Houselots. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 17, (2007).
190.
Charles H. LeeDecker. Discard Behavior on Domestic Historic Sites: Evaluation of Contexts for the Interpretation of Household Consumption Patterns. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 1, 345–375 (1994).
191.
Martin, L. & Russell, N. Trashing rubbish. in Towards reflexive method in archaeology: the example at Çatalhöyük : by members of the Çatalhöyük team vol. McDonald Institute monographs 57–69 (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2000).
192.
Moore, Henrietta L. Space, text, and gender: an anthropological study of the Marakwet of Kenya. (Guilford Press, 1996).
193.
Olivier, L. The Hochdorf ‘princely’ grave and the question of the nature of archaeological funerary assemblages. in Time and archaeology vol. One world archaeology 109–138 (Routledge, 1999).
194.
Patrik, L. Is there an archaeological record? Advances in archaeological method and theory 8, 27–62 (1985).
195.
Pounds, Norman John Greville. Hearth & home: a history of material culture. (Indiana University Press, 1989).
196.
Michael B. Schiffer. Archaeological Context and Systemic Context. American Antiquity 37, 156–165 (1972).
197.
Schiffer, Michael B. Formation processes of the archaeological record. (University of New Mexico Press, 1987).
198.
Schofield, A. J. & Theoretical Archaeology Group (England). Interpreting artefact scatters: contributions to ploughzone archaeology. vol. Oxbow monograph (Oxbow Books, 1991).
199.
Michael J. Shott. Status and Role of Formation Theory in Contemporary Archaeological Practice. Journal of Archaeological Research 6, 299–329 (1998).
200.
Sommer, U. Dirt theory, or archaeological sites seen as rubbish heaps. Journal of theoretical archaeology 1, 47–60 (1990).
201.
Staski, Edward & Sutro, Livingston D. The ethnoarchaeology of refuse disposal. vol. Anthropological research papers (Arizona State University, 1991).
202.
Thompson, M. Rubbish theory: the creation and destruction of value. (Oxford University Press, 1979).
203.
Walker, W. Ceremonial trash? in Expanding archaeology 67–79 (University of Utah Press, 1995).
204.
Wilson, D. C. Identification and assessment of secondary refuse aggregates. Journal of archaeological method and theory 1, 41–68 (1994).
205.
Woodward, A. Beads and beakers: Heirlooms and relics in the British Early Bronze Age. Antiquity 76, 1040–1047 (2002).
206.
Chris Gosden. What Do Objects Want? Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12, 193–211 (2005).
207.
Jones, A. Archaeometry and materiality: materials-based analysis in theory and practice. Archaeometry 46, 327–338 (2004).
208.
Renfrew, C. Towards a theory of material engagement. in Rethinking materiality: the engagement of mind with the material world vol. McDonald Institute monographs 23–31 (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2004).
209.
Buchli, V. Material culture: current problems. in A companion to social archaeology vol. Social archaeology 179–194 (Blackwell, 2004).
210.
Chilton, Elizabeth S. Material meanings: critical approaches to the interpretation of material culture. vol. Foundations of archaeological inquiry (University of Utah Press, 1999).
211.
Cole, Michael. Cultural psychology: a once and future discipline. (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1996).
212.
DeAtley, S. P. & Bishop, R. L. Toward an integrated interface for archaeology and archaeometry. in The ceramic legacy of Anna O. Shepard 358–381 (University Press of Colorado, 1991).
213.
Dobres, Marcia-Anne. Technology and social agency: outlining a practice framework for archaeology. vol. Social archaeology (Blackwell Publishers, 2000).
214.
Dobres, M.-A. & Hoffman, C. R. Social agency and the dynamics of prehistoric technology. Journal of archaeological method and theory 1, 211–258 (1994).
215.
Dobres, Marcia-Anne & Hoffman, Christopher R. The social dynamics of technology: practice, politics, and world views. (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1999).
216.
Foucault, Michel. Discipline and punish: the birth of the prison. (Vintage Books, 1995).
217.
Alfred Gell. Technology and Magic. Anthropology Today 4, 6–9 (1988).
218.
Gell, Alfred. Art and agency: an anthropological theory. (Clarendon Press, 1998).
219.
Olivier P. Gosselain. Technology and Style: Potters and Pottery Among Bafia of Cameroon. Man 27, 559–586 (1992).
220.
Hodder, I. Neo-thingness. in Explaining social change: studies in honour of Colin Renfrew vol. McDonald Institute monographs 45–52 (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2004).
221.
Hosler, Dorothy. The sounds and colors of power: the sacred metallurgical technology of ancient West Mexico. (MIT Press, 1994).
222.
Ingold, T. Materials against materiality. Archaeological Dialogues 14, (2007).
223.
Jones, Andrew. Archaeological theory and scientific practice. vol. Topics in contemporary archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2001).
224.
Jones, Andrew. Memory and material culture. vol. Topics in contemporary archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
225.
Lechtman, H. Style in technology - some early thoughts. in Material culture: styles, organization, and dynamics of technology vol. Proceedings of the American Ethnological Society 3–20 (West Pub. Co, 1977).
226.
Lemonnier, P. The study of material culture today: Toward an anthropology of technical systems. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology (1986) doi:0278-4165(86)90012-7.
227.
Lemonnier, Pierre. Technological choices: transformation in material cultures since the Neolithic. vol. Material cultures (Routledge, 1993).
228.
Lemonnier, Pierre. Elements for an anthropology of technology. vol. Anthropological papers / Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan (Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, 1992).
229.
Andrew Martin. Agents in Inter-Action: Bruno Latour and Agency. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12, 283–311 (2005).
230.
Mauss, M. Body techniques. in Sociology and psychology: essays 97–135 (Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1979).
231.
Miller, D. Artefacts and the meaning of things. in Companion encyclopedia of anthropology vol. Routledge world reference 420–459 (Routledge, 2002).
232.
Morphy, H. Art as a mode of action. Some problems with Gell’s art and agency. Journal of material culture 14, 5–27 (2009).
233.
Nanoglu, S. Regional perspectives on the Neolithic anthropomorphic imagery of Northern Greece. Journal of Mediterranean archaeology 19, 155–176 (2006).
234.
Bryan Pfaffenberger. Fetishised Objects and Humanised Nature: Towards an Anthropology of Technology. Man 23, 236–252 (1988).
235.
Bryan Pfaffenberger. Social Anthropology of Technology. Annual Review of Anthropology 21, 491–516 (1992).
236.
Schiffer, Michael B. & Miller, Andrea R. The material life of human beings: artifacts, behavior, and communication. (Routledge, 1999).
237.
Schiffer, Michael B. Anthropological perspectives on technology. vol. Amerind Foundation New World studies series (University of New Mexico Press, 2001).
238.
Sigaut, F. Technology. in Companion encyclopedia of anthropology vol. Routledge world reference 420–459 (Routledge, 2002).
239.
Mauss, Marcel & Schlanger, Nathan. Techniques, technology and civilisation. (Durkheim Press/Berghahn Books, 2006).
240.
SILLAR, B. & TITE, M. S. THE CHALLENGE OF ‘TECHNOLOGICAL CHOICES’FOR MATERIALS SCIENCE APPROACHES IN ARCHAEOLOGY. Archaeometry 42, 2–20 (2000).
241.
Sillar, B. The Social Agency of Things? Animism and Materiality in the Andes. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 19, (2009).
242.
Appadurai, A. Introduction: commodities and the politics of value. in The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective 3–63 (Cambridge University Press, 1986). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511819582.003.
243.
Earle, T. Exchange systems in prehistory. in Trade and exchange: archaeological studies from history and prehistory 205–217 (Springer, 2010). doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-1072-1_13.
244.
Renfrew, C. Trade as action at a distance. in Ancient civilization and trade vol. School of American Research advanced seminar series 3–59 (University of New Mexico Press, 1975).
245.
Sahlins, M. On the sociology of primitive exchange. in Stone Age economics 185–275 (Routledge, 1974).
246.
Hughes, M. Tracing to source. in Science and the past (British Museum Press, 1991).
247.
Wilson, L. & Pollard, A. M. The provenance hypothesis. in Handbook of archaeological sciences 507–517 (John Wiley, 2001).
248.
Tykot, R. H. Archaeological provenance studies. in Physics methods in archaeometry vol. Proceedings of the International School of Physics ‘Enrico Fermi’ 407–432 (IOS Press, 2004).
249.
Appadurai, A. Introduction: commodities and the politics of value. in The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective 3–63 (Cambridge University Press, 1986).
250.
Dillian, Carolyn D. & White, Carolyn L. Trade and exchange: archaeological studies from history and prehistory. (Springer, 2010).
251.
Minc, L. D. Monitoring regional market systems in prehistory: Models, methods, and metrics. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 25, 82–116 (2006).
252.
Perlès, C. Systems of exchange and organization of production in Neolithic Greece. Journal of mediterranean archaeology 5, 115–164 (1988).
253.
Renfrew, C. Trade as action at a distance. in Ancient civilization and trade vol. School of American Research advanced seminar series 3–59 (University of New Mexico Press, 1975).
254.
Sahlins, Marshall David. Stone Age economics. (Routledge, 2004).
255.
Crump, Thomas. The phenomenon of money. (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981).
256.
George Dalton. Theoretical Issues in Economic Anthropology. Current Anthropology 10, 63–102 (1969).
257.
John H. Dowling. The Goodfellows vs. the Dalton Gang: The Assumptions of Economic Anthropology. Journal of Anthropological Research 35, 292–308 (1979).
258.
Earle, T. Production and exchange in prehistory. in Companion encyclopedia of archaeology 608–635 (Routledge, 1999).
259.
C. A. Gregory. Gifts to Men and Gifts to God: Gift Exchange and Capital Accumulation in Contemporary Papua. Man 15, 626–652 (1980).
260.
Gregory, C. A. Exchange and reciprocity. in Companion encyclopedia of anthropology vol. Routledge world reference 911–933 (Routledge, 2002).
261.
Mauss, Marcel. The gift: the form and reason for exchange in archaic societies. vol. Routledge classics (Routledge, 2002).
262.
Polanyi, Karl. Trade and market in the early empires: economies in history and theory. (Free Press).
263.
Monica L. Smith. The Role of Ordinary Goods in Premodern Exchange. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 6, 109–135 (1999).
264.
Weiner, Annette B. Inalienable possessions: the paradox of keeping-while-giving. (University of California Press, 1992).
265.
Adams, N. K. Political affinities and economic fluctuations: the evidence from textiles. in Ancient textiles: production, craft and society : proceedings of the First International Conference on Ancient Textiles, held at Lund, Sweden, and Copenhagen, Denmark, on March 19-23, 2003 201–207 (Oxbow Books, 2007).
266.
Bamforth, D. B. & Woodman, P. C. Tool hoards and Neolithic use of the landscape in north-eastern Ireland. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 23, 21–44 (2004).
267.
Barrett, J. C. & Needham, S. P. Production, circulation and exchange: problems in the interpretation of Bronze Age bronzework. in The Archaeology of context in the Neolithic and Bronze Age: recent trends vol. Recent trends series 127–140 (Department of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield, 1988).
268.
Bell, C. Wheels within wheels? A view of Mycenaean trade from the Levantine emporia. in Emporia: Aegeans in the central and eastern Mediterranean : proceedings of the 10th International Aegean Conference/10e Rencontre égéenne internationale, Athens, Italian School of Archaeology, 14-18 April 2004 vol. Aegaeum 363–370 (Université de Liège, Histoire de l’art et archéologie de la Grèce antique, 2005).
269.
Bradley, Richard & Edmonds, M. R. Interpreting the axe trade: production and exchange in Neolithic Britain. vol. New studies in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
270.
Clough, T. H. McK. & Cummins, W. A. Stone axe studies: Volume 2: The petrology of prehistoric stone implements from the British Isles. vol. Research report / Council for British Archaeology (Council for British Archaeology, 1988).
271.
Cooney, Gabriel, Mandal, Stephen, Byrnes, Emmet, & O’Carroll, Finola. The Irish Stone Axe Project: Monograph I. (Wordwell, 1998).
272.
Cochrane, E. E. & Neff, H. Investigating compositional diversity among Fijian ceramics with laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS): implications for interaction studies on geologically similar islands. Journal of Archaeological Science 33, 378–390 (2006).
273.
Crawford, Michael H. Coinage and money under the Roman Republic: Italy and the Mediterranean economy. vol. The Library of numismatics (Methuen, 1985).
274.
Creighton, John. Coins and power in late Iron Age Britain. vol. New studies in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2000).
275.
Dietler, M. Rituals of commensality and the politics of state formation in the ‘Princely’ societies of Early Iron Age Europe. in Les princes de la protohistoire et l’émergence de l’Etat: actes de la table ronde internationale organisée par le Centre Jean Bérard et l’Ecole française de Rome, Naples, 27-29 octobre 1994 vol. Collection de l’Ecole française de Rome 135–152 (Centre J. Bérard, 1999).
276.
Dietler, Michael. Archaeologies of colonialism: consumption, entanglement, and violence in ancient Mediterranean France. vol. The Joan Palevsky imprint in classical literature (University of California Press, 2010).
277.
Edmonds, M. R. Stone tools and society: working stone in Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. (Routledge, 1995).
278.
Frankenstein, S. & Rowlands, M. The Internal Structure and regional Context of Early Iron Age Society in South-Western Germany. in Social transformations in archaeology: global and local perspectives vol. Material cultures (Routledge, 1998).
279.
Philip Grierson. Commerce in the Dark Ages: A Critique of the Evidence. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 9, 123–140 (1959).
280.
Kenneth G. Hirth. Political Economy and Archaeology: Perspectives on Exchange and Production. Journal of Archaeological Research 4, 203–239 (1996).
281.
Ian Hodder. Regression Analysis of Some Trade and Marketing Patterns. World Archaeology 6, 172–189 (1974).
282.
Hodder, Ian & Orton, Clive. Spatial analysis in archaeology. vol. New studies in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 1976).
283.
Christopher Howgego. The Supply and Use of Money in the Roman World 200 B.C. to A.D. 300. The Journal of Roman Studies 82, 1–31 (1992).
284.
Lo Cascio, E. How did the Romans view their coinage and its function? in Coin finds and coin use in the Roman world: the thirteenth Oxford Symposium on Coinage and Monetary History, 25.-27.3.1993 : a NATO advanced research workshop vol. Studien zu Fundmünzen der Antike 273–287 (Gebr. Mann Verlag, 1996).
285.
Minc, L. D. Monitoring regional market systems in prehistory: Models, methods, and metrics. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 25, 82–116 (2006).
286.
Needham, S. Displacement and exchange in archaeological methodology. in Trade and exchange in prehistoric Europe: proceedings of a conference held at the University of Bristol, April 1992 161–169 (published by Oxbow Books in association with the Prehistoric Society and the Société préhistorique française, 1993).
287.
Parkinson, W. A. Tribal boundaries: Stylistic variability and social boundary maintenance during the transition to the Copper Age on the Great Hungarian Plain. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 25, 33–58 (2006).
288.
Peacock, D. P. S. & Williams, D. F. Amphorae and the Roman economy: an introductory guide. vol. Longman archaeology series (Longman, 1986).
289.
Perlés, C. Systems of exchange and organization of production in Neolithic Greece. Journal of Mediterranean archaeology 5, 115–164 (1992).
290.
Stein, G. J., Hollander, D. & Schwartz, M. Reconstructing Mesopotamian Exchange Networks in the 4th Millennium BC : Geochemical and Archaeological Analyses of Bitumen Artifacts from Hacinebi Tepe, Turkey. Paléorient 25, 67–82 (1999).
291.
Shennan, S. Commodities, transactions and growth in the Central European Early Bronze Age. European journal of archaeology 1, 59–72 (1993).
292.
Sherratt, S. Eppur si muove: Pots, markets, and values in the second-millennium Mediterranean. in The complex past of pottery: production, circulation and consumption of Mycenaean and Greek pottery (sixteenth to early fifth centuries BC) : proceedings of the ARCHON international conference, held in Amsterdam, 8-9 November 1996 163–211 (J.C. Gieben, 1999).
293.
Sherratt, A. G. & Sherratt, E. S. From luxuries to commodities: The nature of Mediterranean Bronze Age trading systems. in Bronze age trade in the Mediterranean: papers presented at the Conference held at Rewley House, Oxford, in December 1989 vol. Studies in Mediterranean archaeology 351–386 (Åstrom, 1991).
294.
Sillar, B. Reputable pots and disreputable potters: Individual and community choice in present-day pottery production and exchange in the Andes. in Not so much a pot, more a way of life: current approaches to artefact analysis in archaeology vol. Oxbow monograph 1–20 (Oxbow, 1997).
295.
Van Der Leuw, S. Some notes from the potter’s point of view. in The complex past of pottery: production, circulation and consumption of Mycenaean and Greek pottery (sixteenth to early fifth centuries BC) : proceedings of the ARCHON international conference, held in Amsterdam, 8-9 November 1996 115–132 (J.C. Gieben, 1999).
296.
Woolf, G. World-systems analysis and the Roman empire. Journal of Roman archaeology 3, 44–58 (1999).
297.
Flintsource.Net. http://www.flintsource.net/.
298.
IAOS World Obsidian Source Catalog. http://www.obsidianlab.com/sourcecatalog/s_home.html.
299.
FREUND, K. P. AN ASSESSMENT OF THE CURRENT APPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS OF OBSIDIAN SOURCING STUDIES IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH. Archaeometry 55, 779–793 (2013).
300.
Gratuze, B. Obsidian Characterization by Laser Ablation ICP-MS and its Application to Prehistoric Trade in the Mediterranean and the Near East: Sources and Distribution of Obsidian within the Aegean and Anatolia. Journal of Archaeological Science 26, 869–881 (1999).
301.
Herz, N. Sourcing lithic artefacts by instrumental analysis. in Earth sciences and archaeology 449–472 (Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2001).
302.
Huckell, B. B., Kilby, J. D., Boulanger, M. T. & Glascock, M. D. Sentinel Butte: neutron activation analysis of White River Group chert from a primary source and artifacts from a Clovis cache in North Dakota, USA. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 965–976 (2011).
303.
Maniatis, Y. Scientific techniques and methodologies for the provenance of white marble. in Physics methods in archaeometry vol. Proceedings of the International School of Physics ‘Enrico Fermi’ 179–202 (IOS Press, 2004).
304.
Renfrew, C., Dixon, J. E. & Cann, J. R. Obsidian and early cultural contact in the Near East. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 32, 30–72 (1966).
305.
Pollard, A. M., Heron, Carl, & Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain). Archaeological chemistry. (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2008).
306.
Michael E. Smith, Adrian L. Burke, Timothy S. Hare and Michael D. Glascock. Sources of Imported Obsidian at Postclassic Sites in the Yautepec Valley, Morelos: A Characterization Study Using XRF and INAA. Latin American Antiquity 18, 429–450 (2007).
307.
Thorpe, R. S. The geological sources and transport of the bluestones of Stonehenge, Wiltshire, U.K. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 103–157 (1991).
308.
Blomster, J. P. Olmec Pottery Production and Export in Ancient Mexico Determined Through Elemental Analysis. Science 307, 1068–1072 (2005).
309.
Day, P. M., Kiriatzi, E., Tsolakidou, A. & Kilikoglou, V. Group Therapy in Crete: A Comparison Between Analyses by NAA and Thin Section Petrography of Early Minoan Pottery. Journal of Archaeological Science 26, 1025–1036 (1999).
310.
Patrick E. McGovern, Thomas L. Sever, J. Wilson Myers, Eleanor Emlen Myers, Bruce Bevan, Naomi F. Miller, S. Bottema, Hitomi Hongo, Richard H. Meadow, Peter Ian Kuniholm, S. G. E. Bowman, M. N. Leese, R. E. M. Hedges, Frederick R. Matson, Ian C. Freestone, Sarah J. Vaughan, Julian Henderson, Pamela B. Vandiver, Charles S. Tumosa, Curt W. Beck, Patricia Smith, A. M. Child, A. M. Pollard, Ingolf Thuesen and Catherine Sease. Science in Archaeology: A Review. American Journal of Archaeology 99, 79–142 (1995).
311.
Morris, E. L. & Woodward, A. Ceramic petrology and prehistoric pottery in the UK. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 69, 279–304 (2003).
312.
Peacock, D. P. S. Neolithic pottery production in Cornwall. Antiquity 43, 145–149 (1969).
313.
Gale, N. H. A response to the paper of A. M. Pollard. in From mine to microscope: advances in the study of ancient technology 191–196 (Oxbow Books, 2009).
314.
Gale, N. H. & Stos-Gale, Z. Lead isotope analyses applied to provenance studies. in Modern analytical methods in art and archaeology vol. Chemical analysis 503–584 (Wiley, 2000).
315.
GUERRA, M. F., CALLIGARO, T. & PEREA, A. THE TREASURE OF GUARRAZAR: TRACING THE GOLD SUPPLIES IN THE VISIGOTHIC IBERIAN PENINSULA. Archaeometry 49, 53–74 (2007).
316.
Krause, Rüdiger. Studien zur kupfer- und frühbronzezeitlichen Metallurgie zwischen Karpatenbecken und Ostsee. vol. Vorgeschichtliche Forschungen (Leidorf, 2003).
317.
Pernicka, E. Archaeometallurgy: examples of the application of scientific methods to the provenance of archaeological metal objects. in Physics methods in archaeometry vol. Proceedings of the International School of Physics ‘Enrico Fermi’ 309–329 (IOS Press, 2004).
318.
Pollard, A. M. What a long, strange Trip it’s been: lead Isotopes and Archaeology. in From mine to microscope: advances in the study of ancient technology 181–189 (Oxbow Books, 2009).
319.
Stos-Gale, Z. Across the wine dark seas…. sailor tinkers and royal cargoes in the late Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean. in From mine to microscope: advances in the study of ancient technology 163–180 (Oxbow Books, 2009).
320.
Calligaro, T. et al. PIXE/PIGE characterisation of emeralds using an external micro-beam. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 161–163, 769–774 (2000).
321.
Calligaro, T., Colinart, S., Poirot, J.-P. & Sudres, C. Combined external-beam PIXE and μ-Raman characterisation of garnets used in Merovingian jewellery. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 189, 320–327 (2002).
322.
Gratuze, B. & Janssens, K. Provenance analysis of glass artefacts. in Non-destructive microanalysis of cultural heritage materials vol. Comprehensive analytical chemistry 663–712 (Elsevier, 2004).
323.
Popelka-Filcoff, R. S., Miksa, E. J., Robertson, J. D., Glascock, M. D. & Wallace, H. Elemental analysis and characterization of ochre sources from Southern Arizona. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 752–762 (2008).
324.
Robertshaw, P., Wood, M., Melchiorre, E., Popelka-Filcoff, R. S. & Glascock, M. D. Southern African glass beads: chemistry, glass sources and patterns of trade. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 1898–1912 (2010).
325.
Stein, G. J., Hollander, D. & Schwartz, M. Reconstructing Mesopotamian Exchange Networks in the 4th Millennium BC : Geochemical and Archaeological Analyses of Bitumen Artifacts from Hacinebi Tepe, Turkey. Paléorient 25, 67–82 (1999).
326.
Weigand, P. C. Turquoise sources and source analysis: Mesoamerica and the southwestern USA. in Exchange systems in prehistory vol. Studies in archeology 15–34 (Academic Press, 1977).
327.
Eerkens, J. W. & Lipo, C. P. Cultural transmission, copying errors, and the generation of variation in material culture and the archaeological record. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 24, 316–334 (2005).
328.
Brian Hayden. Practical and Prestige Technologies: The Evolution of Material Systems. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 5, 1–55 (1998).
329.
David Wengrow. The Evolution of Simplicity: Aesthetic Labour and Social Change in the Neolithic Near East. World Archaeology 33, 168–188 (2001).
330.
Bailey, G. N. Concepts, time-scales and explanations in economic prehistory. in Economic archaeology: towards an integration of ecological and social approaches vol. BAR international series 97–117 (B.A.R., 1981).
331.
Barnett, William & Hoopes, John W. The emergence of pottery: technology and innovation in ancient societies. vol. Smithsonian series in archaeological inquiry (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1995).
332.
Basalla, George. The evolution of technology. vol. Cambridge history of science (Cambridge University Press, 1988).
333.
Bayley, J. Innovation in later medieval urban metalworking. Historical metallurgy: journal of the Historical Metallurgy Society 30, 67–71 (1996).
334.
Blackman, M. J., Stein, G. J. & Vandiver, P. B. The Standardization Hypothesis and Ceramic Mass Production: Technological, Compositional, and Metric Indexes of Craft Specialization at Tell Leilan, Syria. American Antiquity 58, 60–80 (1993).
335.
Charlton, M. F., Crew, P., Rehren, T. & Shennan, S. J. Explaining the evolution of ironmaking recipes – An example from northwest Wales. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 29, 352–367 (2010).
336.
Costin, C. The impact of the Inca conquest on local technology in the Upper Mantaro Valley, Peru. in What’s new?: a closer look at the process of innovation vol. One world archaeology 107–139 (Unwin Hyman, 1989).
337.
Crossley, D. The English glassmaker and his search for materials in the 16th and 17th centuries. in The prehistory & history of glassmaking technology vol. Ceramics and civilization (American Ceramic Society, 1998).
338.
Fitzhugh, B. Risk and Invention in Human Technological Evolution. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20, 125–167 (2001).
339.
Brian Hayden. Practical and Prestige Technologies: The Evolution of Material Systems. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 5, 1–55 (1998).
340.
Henderson et al., J. Experiment and innovation: early Islamic industry at al-Raqqa, Syria. Antiquity 79, 130–145 (2005).
341.
Humphris, J., Martinón-Torres, M., Rehren, T. & Reid, A. Variability in single smelting episodes – a pilot study using iron slag from Uganda. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 359–369 (2009).
342.
Knecht, H. The role of innovation in changing early upper paleolithic organic projectile technologies - ResearchGate. Techniques et Culture 115–144 (1991).
343.
Lechtman, H. Andean value systems and the development of prehistoric metallurgy. Technology and culture 25, 1–36 (1984).
344.
Lesick, Kurtis & University of Calgary. Eureka: the archaeology of innovation & science : proceedings of the twenty-ninth annual conference of the Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary. (Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary, 2002).
345.
Loney, H. L. Society and Technological Control: A Critical Review of Models of Technological Change in Ceramic Studies. American Antiquity 65, 646–668 (2000).
346.
Martinón-Torres, M. et al. Making Weapons for the Terracotta Army. Archaeology International 13, (2011).
347.
Martinón-Torres, M. Inside Solomon’s House: An Archaeological Study of the Old Ashmolean Chymical Laboratory in Oxford*. Ambix 59, 22–48 (2012).
348.
Martinon-Torres, M. & Rehren, T. Post-medieval crucible productionand distribution: a study of materials and materialities. Archaeometry 51, 49–74 (2009).
349.
Mellars, P. Technological changes across the Middle-upper Palaeolithic transition: economic, social and cognitive perspectives. in The Human revolution: behavioural and biological perspectives on the origins of modern humans 338–365 (Edinburgh University Press, 1989).
350.
Moorey, P. R. The mobility of artisans and opportunities for technology transfer between Western Asia and Egypt in the Late Bronze Age. in The social context of technological change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650-1550 B.C. : proceedings of a conference held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 12-14 September 2000 1–14 (Oxbow, 2001).
351.
Margaret C. Nelson. The Study of Technological Organization. Archaeological Method and Theory 3, 57–100 (1991).
352.
Michael J. O’Brien, Thomas D. Holland, Robert J. Hoard and Gregory L. Fox. Evolutionary Implications of Design and Performance Characteristics of Prehistoric Pottery. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 1, 259–304 (1994).
353.
Raymond, Robert. Out of the fiery furnace: the impact of metals on the history of mankind. (Pennsylvania State UP, 1986).
354.
Rehder, J. E. Blowpipes versus bellows in ancient metallurgy. Journal of Field Archaeology 21, (1994).
355.
Rehren, T. & Martinon-Torres, M. Naturam ars imitata: European brassmaking between craft and science. in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 167–188 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
356.
Rehren, T., Pusch, E. & Herold, A. Glass coloring works within a copper-centered industrial complex in Late Bronze Age Egypt. in The prehistory & history of glassmaking technology vol. Ceramics and civilization 227–250 (American Ceramic Society, 1998).
357.
Roux, V. Ceramic Standardization and Intensity of Production: Quantifying Degrees of Specialization. American Antiquity 68, 768–782 (2003).
358.
Schiffer, M. B. The explanation of long-term technological change. in Anthropological perspectives on technology vol. Amerind Foundation New World studies series 215–235 (University of New Mexico Press, 2001).
359.
Schiffer, Michael B. Studying technological change: a behavioral approach. vol. Foundations of archaeological inquiry (University of Utah Press, 2011).
360.
S. J. Shennan and J. R. Wilkinson. Ceramic Style Change and Neutral Evolution: A Case Study from Neolithic Europe. American Antiquity 66, 577–593 (2001).
361.
Shennan, Stephen. Genes, memes and human history: Darwinian archaeology and cultural evolution. (Thames & Hudson, 2002).
362.
Shortland, A. J. Hopeful monsters? Invention and innovation in the archaeological record. in Invention and innovation: the social context of technological change, 2: Egypt, the Aegean and the Near East, 1650-1150 BC. 1–11 (Oxbow Books, 2004).
363.
Torrence, Robin & Leeuw, Sander Ernst van der. What’s new?: a closer look at the process of innovation. vol. One world archaeology (Unwin Hyman, 1989).
364.
Van der Leeuw, S. E., Papousek, D. A. & Coudart, A. Technical traditions and unquestioned assumptions : the case of pottery in Michoacan. Techniques & culture (1992) doi:10.4000/tc.691.
365.
STRAND B - RESEARCH DESIGN AND MATERIALS ANALYSIS.
366.
Archaeometry - Volume 49, Issue 2 - May 2007 - Wiley Online Library.
367.
Archaeometry - Volume 50, Issue 6 - December 2008 - Wiley Online Library.
368.
Archaeometry - Volume 50, Issue 6 - December 2008 - Wiley Online Library.
369.
Artioli, G. & Angelini, I. Scientific methods and cultural heritage: an introduction to the application of materials science to archaeometry and conservation science. (Oxford University Press, 2010).
370.
Bowman, S. & British Museum. Department of Scientific Research. Science and the past. (University of Toronto Press, 1991).
371.
Brothwell, D. R. & Pollard, A. M. Handbook of archaeological sciences. (John Wiley, 2001).
372.
Demortier, G., Adriaens, A., European Cooperation in the Field of Scientific and Technical Research (Organization), & European Commission. Ion beam study of art and archaeological objects. vol. EUR (Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 2000).
373.
Lambert, J. B. Traces of the past: unraveling the secrets of archaeology through chemistry. vol. Helix books (Perseus, 1997).
374.
Ciliberto, E. & Spoto, G. Modern analytical methods in art and archaeology. vol. Chemical analysis (Wiley, 2000).
375.
Edwards, H. G. M., Chalmers, J. M., & Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain). Raman spectroscopy in archaeology and art history. vol. RSC analytical spectroscopy monographs (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2005).
376.
Edwards, Howell G. M. & Lewis, Ian R. Handbook of Raman spectroscopy: from the research laboratory to the process line. vol. Practical spectroscopy (Marcel Dekker, 2001).
377.
Goffer, Z. Archaeological chemistry. (Wiley, 2007).
378.
Henderson, J. Scientific analysis in archaeology and its interpretation. vol. UCLA Institute of Archaeology, archaeological research tools (Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, Institute of Archaeology, 1989).
379.
Henderson, J. The science and archaeology of materials: an investigation of inorganic materials. (Routledge, 2000).
380.
Janssens, K. H. A. & Grieken, R. van. Non-destructive microanalysis of cultural heritage materials. vol. Comprehensive analytical chemistry (Elsevier, 2004).
381.
Martini, M., Milazzo, M., Piacentini, M., Società italiana di fisica, & International School of Physics ‘Enrico Fermi’. Physics methods in archaeometry. vol. Proceedings of the International School of Physics ‘Enrico Fermi’ (IOS Press, 2004).
382.
Martinón-Torres, M. & Rehren, T. Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials. vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London (Left Coast Press, 2008).
383.
Moreau, J.-F. Proceedings: ISA 2006 : 36th International Symposium on Archaeometry : 2-6 May 2006, Quebec City, Canada. vol. Cahiers d’archéologie du CELAT. (CELAT, Université Laval, 2009).
384.
Arthur M. Sackler Colloquia of the National Academy of Sciences & National Academy of Sciences (U.S.). Scientific examination of art: modern techniques in conservation and analysis : National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., March 19-21, 2003. (National Academies Press, 2005).
385.
Nesse, W. D. Introduction to optical mineralogy. (Oxford University Press, 2004).
386.
Olsen, S. L. Scanning electron microscopy in archaeology. vol. BAR international series (B.A.R., 1988).
387.
Parkes, P. A. Current scientific techniques in archaeology. (Croom Helm, 1986).
388.
Proceedings of the 34th International Symposium on Archaeometry. http://ifc.dpz.es/publicaciones/ebooks/id/2610 (2006).
389.
Pollard, A. M., Heron, C., & Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain). Archaeological chemistry. (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2008).
390.
Pollard, A. M., Batt, C., Young, S. & Stern, B. Analytical chemistry in archaeology. (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
391.
Shackley, M. Steven. X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) in geoarchaeology. (Springer, 2011).
392.
Shackley, M. An introduction to X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analysis in archaeology. in X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) in geoarchaeology 7–44 (Springer, 2011). doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-6886-9_2.
393.
Uda, M., Demortier, G., Nakai, I., & International Symposium on X-ray Archaeometry. X-rays for archaeology. (Springer, 2005).
394.
De Atley, S. P. & Bishop, R. L. Toward an integrated interface for archaeology and archaeometry. in The ceramic legacy of Anna O. Shepard 358–381 (1991).
395.
Hamilton, E. The four scales of technical analysis; or ’how to make archaeometry more useful. in Exploring the role of analytical scale in archaeological interpretation vol. BAR international series 45–48 (Archaeopress, 2004).
396.
Killick, D. Archaeology and archaeometry: From casual dating to a meaningful relationship? Antiquity 71, 518–524 (1997).
397.
Jones, A. Archaeological theory and scientific practice. vol. Topics in contemporary archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2001).
398.
Jones, A. Archaeometry and materiality: materials-based analysis in theory and practice*. Archaeometry 46, 327–338 (2004).
399.
Martinón-Torres, M. Why should archaeologists take history and science seriously? in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 15–36 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
400.
Rehren, T. Qantir-Piramesses and the organisation of the Egyptian glass industry. in The social context of technological change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650-1550 B.C. : proceedings of a conference held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 12-14 September 2000 223–138 (Oxbow, 2001).
401.
Sillar, B. & Tite, M. S. The challenge of ‘Technological choices’ for materials science approaches in archaeology. Archaeometry 42, 2–20 (2000).
402.
Tite, M. S. Overview - materials study in archaeology. in Handbook of archaeological sciences 443–448 (John Wiley, 2001).
403.
Giumlia-Mair, A. Surface characterisation techniques in the study and conservation of art and archaeological artefacts: a review. Materials technology 25, 345–261 (2010).
404.
Dran, J.-C., Salomon, J., Calligaro, T. & Walter, P. Ion beam analysis of art works: 14 years of use in the Louvre. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 219–220, 7–15 (2004).
405.
Adriaens, A. Non-destructive analysis and testing of museum objects: An overview of 5 years of research. Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy 60, 1503–1516 (2005).
406.
Hancock, R. G. V. Elemental analysis. in Modern analytical methods in art and archaeology vol. Chemical analysis 11–20 (Wiley, 2000).
407.
Shackley, M. An introduction to X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analysis in archaeology. in X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) in geoarchaeology 7–44 (Springer, 2011). doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-6886-9_2.
408.
Craig, N. et al. Comparison of XRF and PXRF for analysis of archaeological obsidian from southern Perú. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 2012–2024 (2007).
409.
Speakman, R. J., Little, N. C., Creel, D., Miller, M. R. & Iñañez, J. G. Sourcing ceramics with portable XRF spectrometers? A comparison with INAA using Mimbres pottery from the American Southwest. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 3483–3496 (2011).
410.
Heginbotham, A. AN EVALUATION OF INTER-LABORATORY REPRODUCIBILITY FOR QUANTITATIVE XRF OF HISTORIC COPPER ALLOYS | Arlen Heginbotham - Academia.edu. in Metal 2010. Proceedings of the International Conference on Metal Conservation, Charleston, South Carolina, USA, October 11-15, 2010 244–255 (2010).
411.
Guerra, M. F. Analysis of archaeological metals. The place of XRF and PIXE in the determination of technology and provenance. X-Ray Spectrometry 27, 73–80 (1998).
412.
MILAZZO, M. & CICARDI, C. X-RAY FLUORESCENCE CHARACTERIZATION OF THE CORONA FERREA. Archaeometry 40, 351–360 (1998).
413.
Figueiredo, E., Silva, R. J. C., Araújo, M. F. & Senna-Martinez, J. C. Identification of ancient gilding technology and Late Bronze Age metallurgy by EDXRF, Micro-EDXRF, SEM-EDS and metallographic techniques. Microchimica Acta 168, 283–291 (2010).
414.
Orton, C. Sampling in archaeology. vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2000).
415.
Tite, M. S. Archaeological collections: invasive sampling versus object integrity. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology: PIA 13, 1–6 (2002).
416.
Tubb, K. W. Irreconcilable Differences? Problems with Unprovenanced Antiquities. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology 18, (2007).
417.
Conservation institute, T. G. Infrared Spectroscopy in Conservation Science - infrared spectroscopy. (1999).
418.
De Benedetto, G. E., Laviano, R., Sabbatini, L. & Zambonin, P. G. Infrared spectroscopy in the mineralogical characterization of ancient pottery. Journal of Cultural Heritage 3, 177–186 (2002).
419.
Eiland, M. L. & Williams, Q. Investigation of Islamic ceramics from Tell Tuneinir using X-ray diffraction. Geoarchaeology 16, 875–903 (2001).
420.
Conservation institute, T. G. Infrared Spectroscopy in Conservation Science - infrared spectroscopy. (1999).
421.
Ricciardi, P., Colomban, P., Tournié, A., Macchiarola, M. & Ayed, N. A non-invasive study of Roman Age mosaic glass tesserae by means of Raman spectroscopy. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 2551–2559 (2009).
422.
Ingo, G. M. et al. Combined use of SEM-EDS, OM and XRD for the characterization of corrosion products grown on silver roman coins. Applied Physics A 83, 493–497 (2006).
423.
Abe, Y., Nakai, I., Takahashi, K., Kawai, N. & Yoshimura, S. On-site analysis of archaeological artifacts excavated from the site on the outcrop at Northwest Saqqara, Egypt, by using a newly developed portable fluorescence spectrometer and diffractometer. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 395, 1987–1996 (2009).
424.
Cotte, M. et al. Recent applications and current trends in Cultural Heritage Science using synchrotron-based Fourier transform infrared micro-spectroscopy. Comptes Rendus Physique 10, 590–600 (2009).
425.
Young, M. L. et al. Non-invasive characterization of manufacturing techniques and corrosion of ancient Chinese bronzes and a later replica using synchrotron X-ray diffraction. Applied Physics A 100, 635–646 (2010).
426.
Baxter, M. J. Exploratory multivariate analysis in archaeology. (Edinburgh University Press, 1994).
427.
Baxter, M. J. Statistics in archaeology. vol. Arnold applications of statistics (Arnold, 2003).
428.
Baxter, M. J. & Buck, C. E. Data handling and statistical analysis. in Modern analytical methods in art and archaeology vol. Chemical analysis 681–746 (Wiley, 2000).
429.
BAXTER, M. J. & FREESTONE, I. C. LOG-RATIO COMPOSITIONAL DATA ANALYSIS IN ARCHAEOMETRY*. Archaeometry 48, 511–531 (2006).
430.
Charlton, M. F., Blakelock, E. & Martinon-Torres, M. Investigating the production provenance of iron artifacts with multivariate methods. Journal of Archaeological Science 39, 2280–2293 (2012).
431.
Drennan, R. D. Statistics for archaeologists: a commonsense approach. vol. Interdisciplinary contributions to archaeology (Springer, 2009).
432.
Fletcher, M. & Lock, G. R. Digging numbers: elementary statistics for archaeologists. vol. Monograph / Oxford University Committee for Archaeology (Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 1991).
433.
Orton, Clive. Mathematics in archaeology. vol. Collins archaeology (Collins, 1980).
434.
Shennan, S. Quantifying archaeology. (University of Iowa Press, 1997).
435.
Thornton, C. P., Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C., Liezers, M. & Young, S. M. M. On Pins and Needles: Tracing the Evolution of Copper-base Alloying at Tepe Yahya, Iran, via ICP-MS Analysis of Common-place Items. Journal of Archaeological Science 29, 1451–1460 (2002).
436.
Ponting, M. J. Keeping up with the Romans? Romanisation and copper alloys in First Revolt Palestine. Institute for Archaeo-Metallurgical Studies newsletter 22, 3–6 (2002).
437.
Chippindale, C. Colleagues, talking, writing, publishing. in Handbook of archaeological methods vol. 2 1339–1371 (Altamira Press, 2006).
438.
Sand-Jensen, K. How to write consistently boring scientific literature. Oikos 116, 723–727 (2007).
439.
White, P. Producing the record. in Archaeology in practice: a student guide to archaeological analyses 410–425 (Blackwell, 2006).