1.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
2.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods, and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2016).
3.
Caple, Chris: Objects: reluctant witnesses to the past. Routledge, London (2006).
4.
Carver, M. O. H.: Archaeological investigation. Routledge, London (2009).
5.
Carver, M.: Resources: Archaeological Investigation, http://cw.routledge.com/textbooks/resourcesforarchaeology/resources_archaeological_investigation.asp.
6.
Edmonds, M. R.: Stone tools and society: working stone in Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. Batsford, London (1995).
7.
Greene, Kevin, Moore, Tom: Archaeology: an introduction. Routledge, London (2010).
8.
Henderson, Julian: The science and archaeology of materials: an investigation of inorganic materials. Routledge, London (2000).
9.
Orton, Clive, Tyers, Paul, Vince, A. G.: Pottery in archaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1993).
10.
Renfrew, Colin, Bahn, Paul G.: Archaeology: the key concepts. Routledge, London (2005).
11.
Schiffer, Michael B.: Behavioral archaeology: first principles. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1995).
12.
Schiffer, Michael B.: Formation processes of the archaeological record. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, N.M. (1987).
13.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
14.
Binford, L.R.: A Consideration of Archaeological Research Design. American Antiquity. 29, 425–441 (1964).
15.
Childe, V.G.: Piecing together the past: the interpretation of archaeological data. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (1956).
16.
Lamotta, V., Schiffer, M.: Archaeological formation processes. In: Archaeology: the key concepts. pp. 121–127. Routledge, London (2005).
17.
Lucas, G.: Splitting objects. In: Critical approaches to fieldwork: contemporary and historical archaeological practice. pp. 64–106. Routledge, London (2001).
18.
Miksicek, C.H.: Formation Processes of the Archaeobotanical Record. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 10, 211–247 (1987).
19.
Schiffer, M.B.: Formation processes of the archaeological record. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, N.M. (1987).
20.
Stein, J.K.: A review of site formation processes and their relevance to geoarchaeology. In: Earth sciences and archaeology. pp. 37–51. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York (2001).
21.
van der Leeuw, S.E.: Dust to Dust: a transformational view of the ceramic cycle. In: The many dimensions of pottery: ceramics in archaeology and anthropology. pp. 709–773. Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam (1984).
22.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
23.
Binford, L.R.: Behavioral Archaeology and the ‘Pompeii Premise’. Journal of Anthropological Research. 37, 195–208 (1981).
24.
Richard Bradley: The Destruction of Wealth in Later Prehistory. Man. 17, 108–122 (1982).
25.
Brain, C.K.: The hunters or the hunted?: An introduction to African cave taphonomy. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1980).
26.
Hayden, B., Cannon, A.: Where the garbage goes: Refuse disposal in the Maya Highlands. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2, 117–163 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(83)90010-7.
27.
Hill, J.D.: Ritual and rubbish in the Iron Age of Wessex: a study on the formation of a specific archaeological record. Tempus Reparatum, Oxford (1995).
28.
LaMotta, V.M., Schiffer, B.: Formation processes of housefloor assemblages. In: Allison, P.M. (ed.) The archaeology of household activities. pp. 19–29. Routledge, London (1999).
29.
Lucas, G.: Eventful contexts. In: Critical approaches to fieldwork: contemporary and historical archaeological practice. pp. 146–199. Routledge, London (2001).
30.
Schiffer, M.B.: Behavioral chain analysis: activities, organization and the use of space. In: Behavioral archaeology: first principles. pp. 55–66. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1995).
31.
Schiffer, M.B.: Archaeological Context and Systemic Context. American Antiquity. 37, 156–165 (1972).
32.
Schiffer, M.B.: Formation processes of the archaeological record. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, N.M. (1987).
33.
Carver, M.O.H.: Archaeological investigation. Routledge, London (2009).
34.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
35.
Carver, M.O.H.: The nature of urban deposits. In: Urban archaeology in Britain. pp. 9–26. Council for British Archaeology, London (1987).
36.
Carver, M.O.H.: Underneath English towns: interpreting urban archaeology. B.T. Batsford, London (1987).
37.
Drewett, P., Ellison, A.B., Cartwright, C.R., Hinton, P., O’Connor, T.P.: Later Bronze Age Downland Economy and Excavations at Black Patch, East Sussex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 48, 321–400 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00008434.
38.
Gardner, A.: Time and empire in the Roman world. Journal of Social Archaeology. 12, 145–166 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/1469605312439971.
39.
Greig, J.: The interpretation of pollen spectra from urban deposits. In: Environmental archaeology in the urban context. pp. 47–65. Council for British Archaeology, London (1982).
40.
Lucas, G.: Eventful contexts. In: Critical approaches to fieldwork: contemporary and historical archaeological practice. pp. 146–199. Routledge, London (2001).
41.
Parker Pearson, Michael: The archaeology of death and burial. Sutton, Stroud (1999).
42.
Lock, G., Harris, T.: Visualising spatial data: the importance of Geographic Information Systems. In: Archaeology and the information age: a global perspective. pp. 80–96. Routledge, London (1992).
43.
Vita-Finzi, C., Higgs, E.S., Sturdy, D., Harriss, J., Legge, A.J., Tippett, H.: Prehistoric Economy in the Mount Carmel Area of Palestine: Site Catchment Analysis. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 36, 1–37 (1970). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00013074.
44.
Bevan, A.: Spatial methods for analysing large-scale artefact inventories. Antiquity. 86, 492–506 (2012).
45.
Binford, L.R.: People in their lifespace. In: In pursuit of the past: decoding the archaeological record : with a new afterword. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA (2002).
46.
Hodder, I.: Locational models and the study of Romano-British settlement. In: Models in archaeology. pp. 887–909. Methuen, London (1972).
47.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
48.
Hirsch, Eric, O’Hanlon, Michael: The anthropology of landscape: perspectives on place and space. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1995).
49.
Hamilton, S., Whitehouse, R., Brown, K., Combes, P., Herring, E., Thomas, M.S.: Phenomenology in Practice: Towards a Methodology for a `Subjective’ Approach. European Journal of Archaeology. 9, 31–71 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1177/1461957107077704.
50.
Tilley, C.: Phenomenological approaches to landscape archaeology. In: Handbook of landscape archaeology. pp. 271–276. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2008).
51.
Bender, Barbara: Landscape: politics and perspectives. Berg, New York (1993).
52.
Barbara Bender: Theorising Landscapes, and the Prehistoric Landscapes of Stonehenge. Man. 27, 735–755 (1992).
53.
Bender et al., B.: Methodologies. In: Stone worlds: narrative and reflexivity in landscape archaeology. pp. 50–75. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2007).
54.
Cosgrove, D.: Geography is everywhere: culture and symbolism in human landscapes. In: Horizons in human geography. pp. 118–135. Macmillan Education, Basingstoke (1989).
55.
Hamilton, S., Seager Thomas, M., Whitehouse, R.: Say it with stone: constructing with stones on Easter Island. World Archaeology. 43, 167–190 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2011.586273.
56.
Hamilton, S., Harrison, S., Bender, B.: Conflicting imaginations: Archaeology, anthropology and geomorphology on Leskernick Hill, Bodmin Moor, southwest Britain. Geoforum. 39, 602–615 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2006.11.025.
57.
Morphy, H.: Landscape and the reproduction of the ancestral past. In: The anthropology of landscape: perspectives on place and space. pp. 184–209. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1995).
58.
Tilley, C.Y.: Space, place, landscape and perception: phenomenological perspectives. In: A phenomenology of landscape: places, paths, and monuments. pp. 7–34. Berg, Oxford (1994).
59.
Christopher Tilley: The Powers of Rocks: Topography and Monument Construction on Bodmin Moor. World Archaeology. 28, 161–176 (1996).
60.
Parker Pearson, M., Ramiiisonina: Stonehenge for the Ancestors: the stones pass on the message. Antiquity. 72, 308–326 (1998).
61.
Renfrew, Colin, Bahn, Paul G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
62.
David, N., Kramer, C.: Studying artifacts: functions, operating sequences, taxonomy. In: Ethnoarchaeology in action. pp. 138–167. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
63.
DeBoer, W., Lathrap, D.: The making and breaking of Shipibo-Conibo ceramics. In: Ethnoarchaeology: implications of ethnography for archaeology. pp. 102–138. Columbia University Press, New York (1979).
64.
Ferguson, Jeffrey R.: Designing experimental research in archaeology: examining technology through production and use. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, Colo (2010).
65.
Hayden, B., Cannon, A.: Where the garbage goes: Refuse disposal in the Maya Highlands. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2, 117–163 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(83)90010-7.
66.
Hodder, Ian: The present past: an introduction to anthropology for archaeologists. Batsford, London (1982).
67.
Millson, Dana C. E., Theoretical Archaeology Group (England): Experimentation and interpretation: the use of experimental archaeology in the study of the past. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2011).
68.
Peacock, D. P. S.: Pottery in the Roman world: an ethnoarchaeological approach. Longman, London (1982).
69.
Reynolds, P.J.: The nature of experiment in archaeology. In: Experiment and design: archaeological studies in honour of John Coles. pp. 156–162. Oxbow Books, Oxford (1999).
70.
Saraydar, Stephen C.: Replicating the past: the art and science of the archaeological experiment. Waveland Press, Long Grove, Ill (2008).
71.
Michael Brian Schiffer and James M. Skibo: The Explanation of Artifact Variability. American Antiquity. 62, 27–50 (1997).
72.
Shimada, I.: Experimental archaeology. In: Handbook of archaeological methods. pp. 603–642. Altamira Press, Lanham, Md (2005).
73.
Jean-Pierre Protzen: Inca Quarrying and Stonecutting. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 44, 161–182 (1985).
74.
Bell, M., Fowler, P.J., Hillson, S., Andrews, P., Council for British Archaeology, British Association for the Advancement of Science: The experimental earthwork project, 1960-1992. Council for British Archaeology, York (1996).
75.
Bradley, R.: The significance of monuments: on the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. Routledge, London (1998).
76.
Jewell, P.A., Dimbleby, G.W.: The experimental earthwork on Overton Down, Wiltshire, England: the first four years. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 32, 313–342 (1966).
77.
Ogburn, D.: Power in Stone: The Long-Distance Movement of Building Blocks in the Inca Empire. Ethnohistory. 51, 101–135 (2004).
78.
Parker Pearson, M., Ramiiisonina: Stonehenge for the Ancestors: the stones pass on the message. Antiquity. 72, 308–326 (1998).
79.
Sillar, B.: The building and rebuilding of walls: Aspirations, commitments and tensions within an Andean community and the archaeological monument they inhabit. Journal of Material Culture. 18, 27–51 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1177/1359183512473558.
80.
Peacock, D.P.S.: Neolithic pottery production in Cornwall. Antiquity. 43, 145–149 (1969).
81.
Bowman, S.: Tracing to Source. In: Science and the past. pp. 99–116. British Museum Press, London (1991).
82.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
83.
Blomster et al., J.P.: Olmec Pottery Production and Export in Ancient Mexico Determined Through Elemental Analysis. Science. 307, 1068–1072 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1107599.
84.
Henderson, Julian: The science and archaeology of materials: an investigation of inorganic materials. Routledge, London (2000).
85.
Thomas, H.H.: The source of the stones of Stonehenge. Antiquaries Journal. 3, 239–260 (1923). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003581500005096.
86.
Tykot, R.H.: Archaeological provenance studies. In: Martini et al., M. (ed.) Physics methods in archaeometry. pp. 407–432. IOS Press, Amsterdam (2004).
87.
Wilson, L., Pollard, A.M.: The provenance hypothesis. In: Brothwell, D.R. and Pollard, A.M. (eds.) Handbook of archaeological sciences. pp. 507–517. John Wiley, Chichester (2001).
88.
Greene, K., Moore, T.: Dating the past. In: Archaeology: an introduction. pp. 148–189. Routledge, London (2010).
89.
Renfrew, C.: When? Dating Methods and Chronology. In: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. pp. 121–174. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
90.
Dee, M., Wengrow, D., Shortland, A., Stevenson, A., Brock, F., Girdland Flink, L., Bronk Ramsey, C.: An absolute chronology for early Egypt using radiocarbon dating and Bayesian statistical modelling. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 469, 20130395–20130395 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2013.0395.
91.
Darvill et al., T.: Stonehenge remodelled. Antiquity. 86, 1021–1040 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00048225.
92.
Adams, W.Y.: Archaeological classification: theory versus practice. Antiquity. 62, 40–56 (1988).
93.
Aitken, M.J.: Science-based dating in archaeology. Longman, London (1990).
94.
Lowe, J. J., Walker, M. J. C.: Reconstructing Quaternary environments. Prentice Hall, Harlow (1997).
95.
Bailey, G.: Concepts, time-scales and explanations in economic prehistory. In: Economic archaeology: towards an integration of ecological and social approaches. pp. 97–117. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford (1981).
96.
Lucas, Gavin: The archaeology of time. Routledge, London (2005).
97.
Plog, S., Hantman, J.L.: Chronology Construction and the Study of Prehistoric Culture Change. Journal of Field Archaeology. 17, 439–456 (1990). https://doi.org/10.2307/530005.
98.
Smart, Peter, Frances, Peter D., Quaternary Research Association (Great Britain): Quaternary dating methods: a user’s guide. Quaternary Research Association, Cambridge (1991).
99.
Taylor, R.E., Aitken, M.J.: Chronometric dating in archaeology. Plenum Press, New York (1997).
100.
Sillar, B., Tite, M.S.: The challenge of ‘technological choices’ for materials science approaches in archaeology. Archaeometry. 42, 2–20 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4754.2000.tb00863.x.
101.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.: How did they make and use tools technology. In: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. pp. 317–356. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
102.
Barnett, William, Hoopes, John W.: The emergence of pottery: technology and innovation in ancient societies. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington [D.C.] (1995).
103.
Cathy Lynne Costin: Craft Specialization: Issues in Defining, Documenting, and Explaining the Organization of Production. Archaeological Method and Theory. 3, 1–56 (1991).
104.
Kingery, W. D.: Learning from things: method and theory of material culture studies. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. (1996).
105.
Lemonnier, Pierre: Technological choices: transformation in material cultures since the Neolithic. Routledge, London (1993).
106.
Lemonnier, P.: The study of material culture today: Toward an anthropology of technical systems. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 5, 147–186 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(86)90012-7.
107.
Lemonnier, Pierre: Elements for an anthropology of technology. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich (1992).
108.
Schlanger, N.: Mindful technology: unleasing the chaine operatoire for an archaeology of the mind. In: The ancient mind: elements of cognitive archaeology. pp. 143–151. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
109.
Sigaut, F.: Technology. In: Companion encyclopedia of anthropology. pp. 420–459. Routledge, London (2002).
110.
Edmonds, M.R.: Squeezing blood from stones. In: Stone tools and society: working stone in Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. pp. 9–19. Batsford, London (1995).
111.
Whittaker, J.C.: A brief history of flintknapping. In: Flintknapping: making and understanding stone tools. pp. 23–63. University of Texas Press, Austin (1994).
112.
Binford, L.: The challenge of the Mousterian. In: In pursuit of the past: decoding the archaeological record : with a new afterword. pp. 79–94. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA (2002).
113.
Edmonds, M. R.: Stone tools and society: working stone in Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. Batsford, London (1995).
114.
Holdaway, S., Stern, N.: A record in stone: the study of Australia’s flaked stone artefacts. Aboriginal Studies Press, Canberra (2004).
115.
Inizan, M.-L., Féblot-Augustins, J., Cercle de Recherches et d’Etude Préhistoriques: Technology and terminology of knapped stone: followed by a multilingual vocabulary Arabic, English, French, German, Greek, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish. CREP, Nanterre (1999).
116.
Odell, G.H.: Tool function. In: Lithic analysis. pp. 135–174. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York (2004).
117.
Pigeot, N.: Technical and social actors: flintknapping specialists and apprentices at Magdalenian Etiolles. Archaeological review from Cambridge. 9, 126–141 (1990).
118.
Schick, Kathy Diane, Toth, Nicholas Patrick: Making silent stones speak: human evolution and the dawn of technology. Phoenix, London (1995).
119.
Torrence, R.: The obsidian quarries and their use. In: An Island polity: the archaeology of exploitation in Melos. pp. 193–221. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1982).
120.
Renfrew, C.: Trade as Action at a Distance: Questions of Integration and Communication. In: Ancient civilization and trade. pp. 3–59. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1975).
121.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: What contact did the have? In: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. pp. 347–380. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
122.
Appadurai, A.: Introduction: commodities and the politics of value. In: The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. pp. 3–63. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1986).
123.
Bradley, Richard, Edmonds, M. R.: Interpreting the axe trade: production and exchange in Neolithic Britain. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1993).
124.
Graham, E.: Resource Diversity in Belize and Its Implications for Models of Lowland Trade. American Antiquity. 52, 753–767 (1987).
125.
Gregory, C.A.: Exchange and reciprocity. In: Ingold, T. (ed.) Companion encyclopedia of anthropology. pp. 911–933. Routledge, London (2002).
126.
Peacock, D.P.S., Williams, D.F.: Amphorae and the Roman economy: an introductory guide. Longman, London (1986).
127.
Perles, C.: Systems of Exchange and Organization of Production in Neolithic Greece. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology. 5, 115–164 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v5i2.115.
128.
Woolf, G.: World-systems analysis and the Roman Empire. Journal of Roman archaeology. 3, 44–58 (1990).
129.
M. S. Tite: Pottery Production, Distribution, and Consumption: The Contribution of the Physical Sciences. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 6, 181–233 (1999).
130.
Van Der Leeuw, S.E.: Dust to Dust: A transformational view of the ceramic cycle. In: The many dimensions of pottery: ceramics in archaeology and anthropology. pp. 709–773. Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam (1984).
131.
Arnold, Dean E.: Ceramic theory and cultural process. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1985).
132.
Barnett, William, Hoopes, John W.: The emergence of pottery: technology and innovation in ancient societies. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington [D.C.] (1995).
133.
Freestone, Ian, Gaimster, David R. M.: Pottery in the making: world ceramic traditions. British Museum Press, London (1997).
134.
Henderson, J.: Ceramics. In: The science and archaeology of materials: an investigation of inorganic materials. pp. 109–207. Routledge, London (2000).
135.
Orton, C.: The potential of pottery as archaeological evidence. In: Pottery in archaeology. pp. 23–35. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2013).
136.
Rice, Prudence M.: Pottery analysis: a sourcebook. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1987).
137.
Prudence M. Rice: Recent Ceramic Analysis: 2. Composition, Production, and Theory. Journal of Archaeological Research. 4, 165–202 (1996).
138.
Rye, Owen S.: Pottery technology: principles and reconstruction. Taraxacum, Washington, D.C. (1981).
139.
Skibo, James M., Feinman, Gary M.: Pottery and people: a dynamic interaction. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1999).
140.
Tyers, Paul: Roman pottery in Britain. Batsford, London (1996).
141.
Richard Bradley: The Destruction of Wealth in Later Prehistory. Man. 17, 108–122 (1982).
142.
Chapman, J.: Fragmentation in archaeology: people, places, and broken objects in the prehistory of south-eastern Europe. Routledge, London (2000).
143.
Corbey, R., Layton, R., Tanner, J.T.: Archaeology and Art. In: A companion to archaeology. pp. 357–379. Blackwell, Malden, MA (2004).
144.
Deal, M.: Household pottery disposal in the Maya highlands: An ethnoarchaeological interpretation. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 4, 243–291 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(85)90008-X.
145.
Deal, M., Hagstrum, B.: Ceramic reuse behavior among the Maya and Wanka: Implications for Archaeology. In: Expanding archaeology. pp. 111–125. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1995).
146.
Graham, E.: Control without Controlling. In: Motul de San José: politics, history, and economy in a classic Maya polity. pp. 419–430. University Press of Florida, Gainesville (2012).
147.
Hodder, I., World Archaeological Congress: The meanings of things: material culture and symbolic expression. Unwin Hyman, HarperCollins Academic, London (1989).
148.
Hodder, I.: The Decoration of Containers: An Ethnographic and Historical Study. In: Ceramic ethnoarchaeology. pp. 71–94. University of Arizona Press, Tucson (1991).
149.
Kopytoff, I.: The cultural biography of things: commoditization as process. In: The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. pp. 64–94. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1986).
150.
Parker Pearson, M.: Status, rank and power. In: The archaeology of death and burial. pp. 72–94. Sutton, Stroud (1999).
151.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: How were societies organized? In: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. pp. 169–222. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
152.
Sackett, J.R.: Style and Ethnicity in the Kalahari: A Reply to Wiessner. American Antiquity. 50, 154–159 (1985).
153.
Shennan, S.: Introduction: Archaeological approaches to cultural identity. In: Archaeological approaches to cultural identity. pp. 1–32. Routledge, London (1994).
154.
Is there a Place for Aesthetics in Archaeology? Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 4, 249–269 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300001098.
155.
Wiessner, P.: Style and Social Information in Kalahari San Projectile Points. American Antiquity. 48, 253–276 (1983).
156.
Wobst, H.M.: Stylistic behavior and information exchange. In: For the director: research essays in honor of James B. Griffin. pp. 317–342. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (1977).
157.
J. Bayley et al., English Heritage: Archaeometallurgy. Centre for Archaeology Guidelines. English Heritage, Swindon (2001).
158.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: How did they make and use tools technology. In: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. pp. 317–356. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
159.
Bayley, J., Crossley, David W., Ponting, Matthew: Metals and metalworking: a research framework for archaeometallurgy. Historical Metallurgy Society, London (2008).
160.
Cleere, H.: Ironmaking in the economy of the ancient world: the potential of archaeometallurgy. In: Scott et al., B.G. (ed.) The Crafts of the blacksmith. pp. 1–6. UISPP Comité pour la Sidérurgie Ancienne and the Ulster Museum, Belfast?] (1986).
161.
Craddock, P.T.: Mining and smelting in Antiquity. In: Bowman, S. (ed.) Science and the past. pp. 57–73. British Museum Press, London (1991).
162.
Craddock, P.T.: Early metal mining and production. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1995).
163.
Rehren, T.H., Pernicka, E.: Coins, artefacts and isotopes - archaeometallurgy and archaeometry. Archaeometry. 50, 232–248 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4754.2008.00389.x.
164.
Tylecote, R.F.: The early history of metallurgy in Europe. Longman, London (1987).
165.
Lambert, J.B.: Metals. In: Traces of the past: unraveling the secrets of archaeology through chemistry. pp. 168–213. Perseus, Cambridge, Mass (1997).
166.
Cronyn, J.M.: Introducing archaeological conservation. In: The elements of archaeological conservation. pp. 1–13. Routledge, London (1990).
167.
Cronyn, J.M.: Agents of Deterioration and Preservation. In: The elements of archaeological conservation. pp. 14–42. Routledge, London (1990).
168.
Jones, S., Holden, J.: It’s a material world: caring for the public realm. Demos, London (2008).
169.
Buttler, C.J., Davis, M., National Museum Wales: Things fall apart--: museum conservation in practice. National Museum Wales Books, Cardiff (2006).
170.
Pye, Elizabeth: Caring for the past: issues in conservation for archaeology and museums. James & James, London (2001).
171.
Sease, C.: A conservation manual for the field archaeologist. Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles (1994).
172.
Watkinson, David, Neal, Virginia, United Kingdom Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, Museum of London, Rescue (Trust): First aid for finds. RESCUE - The British Archaeological Trust; Archaeology Section of the UKIC; The Museum of London, Hertford (1998).
173.
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, Princeton, N.J (1991).
174.
Elizabeth M. Brumfiel: The Quality of Tribute Cloth: The Place of Evidence in Archaeological Argument. American Antiquity. 61, 453–462 (1996).
175.
Davis, Simon J. M.: The archaeology of animals. Batsford, London (1987).
176.
Dijkman, W., Ervynck, A.: Antler, bone, horn, ivory and teeth: the use of animal skeletal materials in Roman and early medieval Maastricht. Archaeology Section, Department of Urban Development and Ground Maintenance, Municipality of Maastricht in collaboration with the Institute for the Archaeological Heritage of the Flemish Community, Maastricht (1998).
177.
McCorriston, J.: The Fibre Revolution. Textile Extensification, Alienation, and Social Stratification in Ancient Mesopotamia. Current Anthropology. 38, 517–535 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1086/204643.
178.
Mc Donnell, J.G.: Pyrotechnology. In: Handbook of archaeological sciences. pp. 493–312. John Wiley, Chichester (2001).
179.
Renfrew, C., Bahn, P.G.: Archaeology: theories, methods and practice. Thames & Hudson, London (2008).
180.
Sillar, B.: Dung by preference: The choice of fuel as an example of how Andean pottery production is embedded within wider technical, social, and economic practices. Archaeometry. 42, 43–60 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4754.2000.tb00865.x.
181.
Wild, John Peter: Textiles in archaeology. Shire, Princes Risborough (1988).