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Full Description
Recent archaeological scholarship along with technical and technological advances in near-surface geophysics has brought exciting new possibilities to a growing body of archaeological thought. Yet, few explicitly theoretical attempts have been made to provide archaeological geophysics with anthropological premises. Anthropological Research Framing for Archaeological Geophysics: Material Signatures of Past Human Behavior initiates a dialogue with other archaeological and geophysical professionals to do so. Most archaeological applications of geophysics remain methodological and technical, devoted to gaining awareness of buried anthropogenic materials but not human behavior. By proposing the amelioration of communication gaps between traditional and geophysical archaeologists, Jason Randall Thompson foments dialogue and participates in bringing about new ways of thinking anthropologically about archaeological geophysics.
Contents
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Geophysical Technology Commonly Applied in Archaeology
Chapter 2: Bridging Gaps
Chapter 3: The Nature of a Problem
Chapter 4: Towards Using AGP Anthropologically in Archaeology
Chapter 5: Introduction to Research Frames: Relations between Research Procedures and Research Goals
Chapter 6: Success at Verberie
Chapter 7: Failure at 13DB674 in Iowa or Redefinition of Success?
Chapter 8: Framing Testable Humanistic Hypotheses for AGP
Chapter 9: Ideas for How to Do This