American Contributions to European Archaeology
ill. 25 cm We survey the American archaeologists who have contributed to European prehistoric and historic research. Since the 1960s, the number of American archaeologists working in Europe has increased, now including over 130 archaeologists working in 33 countries. Contributing American archaeolog...
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Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk
2010
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American archaeologists European archaeology history of archaeology archeolodzy amerykańscy archeologia europejska historia archeologii |
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American archaeologists European archaeology history of archaeology archeolodzy amerykańscy archeologia europejska historia archeologii Milisauskas, Sarunas Thurston, Tina Whitlow, Raymond American Contributions to European Archaeology |
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American archaeologists European archaeology history of archaeology archeolodzy amerykańscy archeologia europejska historia archeologii |
description |
ill. 25 cm We survey the American archaeologists who have contributed to European prehistoric and historic research. Since the 1960s, the number of American archaeologists working in Europe has increased, now including over 130 archaeologists working in 33 countries. Contributing American archaeologists are defined as those with US citizenship who have published articles presenting field data or artifact analysis. These archaeologists have contributed strongly to European Palaeolithic and Neolithic research, but only few have specialized in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Following a table of archaeologists and their research interests we discuss the contributions of specific archaeologists in more depth. The quantity of archaeological data generated by Americans in Europe is impressive, since numerous excavations of specific sites have been carried out. Finally, we consider some factors affecting international collaboration and those aspects of Europe which make it so appealing to American archaeologists il. 25 cm We survey the American archaeologists who have contributed to European prehistoric and historic research. Since the 1960s, the number of American archaeologists working in Europe has increased, now including over 130 archaeologists working in 33 countries. Contributing American archaeologists are defined as those with US citizenship who have published articles presenting field data or artifact analysis. These archaeologists have contributed strongly to European Palaeolithic and Neolithic research, but only few have specialized in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Following a table of archaeologists and their research interests we discuss the contributions of specific archaeologists in more depth. The quantity of archaeological data generated by Americans in Europe is impressive, since numerous excavations of specific sites have been carried out. Finally, we consider some factors affecting international collaboration and those aspects of Europe which make it so appealing to American archaeologists |
format |
Text |
author |
Milisauskas, Sarunas Thurston, Tina Whitlow, Raymond |
author_facet |
Milisauskas, Sarunas Thurston, Tina Whitlow, Raymond |
author_sort |
Milisauskas, Sarunas |
title |
American Contributions to European Archaeology |
title_short |
American Contributions to European Archaeology |
title_full |
American Contributions to European Archaeology |
title_fullStr |
American Contributions to European Archaeology |
title_full_unstemmed |
American Contributions to European Archaeology |
title_sort |
american contributions to european archaeology |
publisher |
Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk |
publishDate |
2010 |
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https://rcin.org.pl/dlibra/publication/edition/55436/content |
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Arctic Arctic Anthropology |
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Arctic Arctic Anthropology |
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IAiE PAN, call no. P 244 IAiE PAN, call no. P 245 IAiE PAN, call no. P 243 http://iaie.katalog.pan.pl/ipac20/ipac.jsp?profile=iaepan&index=BOCLC&term=ee95400634 IAiE PAN, sygn. P 244 IAiE PAN, sygn. P 245 IAiE PAN, sygn. P 243 |
op_relation |
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne Adams B. (and Árpád Ringer) 2001. Sajóbábony-Méhésztetӧ, Eponymous Site of the Middle Palaeolithic Bábonyiam Industry: Microwear Studies Made on Tools at the Site During the 1997 Excavation. Praehistoria 1,117-128 Adler D. S. Prindville 'T. P. and Conrad N. J. 2003. Patterns of Spatial Organization and Land Use During the Eemian Intergalcial in the Rhineland: New Data from Wllertheim, Germany. Eurasian Prehistory 1(2), 25-78 Adovasio J. M. and Masłowski R. F. 1988. Textile Impressions on Ceramic Vessels at Divostin. In A. McPherron and D. Srejović (eds.), Divostin and the Neolithic of Central Serbia. Pittsburgh, 345-354 Allen S. E. 2005. A Living Landscape. The Palaeoethnobotany of Sovjan, Albania. Ann Arbor (University Microfilms) Ammerman A. J. and Cavalli-Sforza L. L. 1972. Measuring the rate of spread of early farming in Europe. Man 6, 674-688 Antanaitis-Jacobs I., Kisielienë D. and Stančikaitë M. 2004. Archeobotanika Lietuvoje: Makrobotaniniai ir palinologiniai tyrinëjimai. Lietuvos Archeologija 26, 75-96 Anthony D. W. 2007. The Horse, the wheel, and language. Princeton Anthony D. W. and Brown D. R. 1991. The origins of horseback riding. Antiquity 65, 22-38 Arnold B. 1990. The past as propaganda: totalitarian archaeology in Nazi Germany. Antiquity 64(244), 464-478 Arnold B. 2005. Mobile Men, Sedentary Women? Material culture as a marker of regional and supra-regional interaction in early Iron Age southwest Germany. In H. Dobrzańska, J. V. S. Megaw and P. Poleska (eds.), Celts on the Margin: Studies in European Cultural Interaction 7th c. BC - 1st c. AD. Essay in Honor of Zenon Woźniak. Kraków, 17-26 Atkinson J. A., Banks I. and O'Sullivan J. (eds.) 1996. Nationalism and Archaeology : Scottish Archaeological Forum. Glasgow Bailey D. W. 2005. Prehistoric Figurines: Representation and Corporeality in the Neolithic. London Baldia M. O., Staeck J. P. and Šmid M. 2001. Hügelgräberfeld der Trichterbecherkultur in Ludéřov. Pravěk 11, 43-59 Bankoff H. A. and Winter F. A. 1990. The Later Aeneolithic in Southeastern Europe. American Journal of Archaeology 94(2), 175-191 Banks W. E. 1996. Statistical Analysis of Flake and Blade Dorsal Patterns from Kraków-Spadzista Units E and F: A Study of the Organization of Site Space. Folia Quaternaria 67, 63-74 Banks W. E. 2002. Analyse Tracéologique de l'Industrie Lithique Aurignacienne de Solutré, Secteur M12. In J. Combier and A. Montet-White (eds.), Solutré: Les fouilles 1968-1998 (= Société Préhistorique Française. Memoir 30), Paris, 243-246 Barber E. J. W. 1991. Prehistoric Textiles. The Development of Cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with Special Reference to the Aegean. Princeton Barnett W. 1990. Small-scale transport of Early Neolithic pottery in the west Mediterranean. Antiquity 64, 859-865 Beck C. W. 1970. Amber in archaeology. Archaeology 23(1), 7-11 Bigelow G. F., Ferrante S. M., Hall S. T., Kimball L. M., Proctor R. E. and Remington S. L. 2005. Researching catastrophic environmental changes on northern coastlines: a geoarchaeological case study from the Shetland Islands. Arctic Anthropology 42(1), 88-102 Binford L. R. and Binford S. 1966. A preliminary analysis of functional variability in the Mousterian of Levallois Facies. American Anthropologist 68, 238-295 Biskowski M. 2003. Supplementary Report on the Sitagroi Groundstone Tools. In E. S. Elster and C. Renfrew (eds.), Prehistoric Sitagroi 2. Los Angeles, 196-203 Blades B. S. 2001. Aurignacian Lithic Economy: Ecological Perspective from Southwestern France. New York Blake E. 1998. Sardinia's nuraghi: four millennia of becoming. World Archaeology 30(1), 59-71 Bogucki P. 1988. Forest Farmers and Stockherders: Early Agriculture and its Consequences in North-Central Europe. Cambridge Bogucki P. 2008. The Danubian - Baltic Borderland: Northern Poland in the Fifth Millennium BC. Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 40, 51-65 Bogucki P. and Grygiel R. 1993. The first farmers of central Europe: a review article. Journal of Field Archaeology 20(3), 399-426 Bogucki P. and Crabtree P. J. (eds.) 2004. Ancient Europe 8000 B.C. - A. D. 1000. Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World. New York Bolender D. J., Steinberg J. M. and Durrenberger E. P. 2008. Unsettled Landscapes: Settlement patterns and the development of social inequality in Northern Iceland. In C. Pool and L. Cligget (eds.), Economies and the Transformation of the Landscape. Lanham, 217-238 Bower J. and Kobusiewicz M. 2002. A Comparative Study of Prehistoric Foragers in Europe and North America: Cultural Responses to the End of the Ice Age. Lampeter Brandt R., Groenewoudt B. J. and Kvamme K. L. 1992. An Experiment in Archaeological Site Location: Modeling in the Netherlands using GIS techniques. World Archaeology 24(2), 268-282 Byock J., Walker P., Erlandson J., Hoick P., Zore D., Gudmundsson M. and Tveskov M. 2005. A Viking Age Valley in Iceland: The Mosfell Archaeology Project. Medieval Archaeology: Journal of the Society for Medieval Archaeology X49, 195-218 Clarke G. 2002. Neandertal archaeology-implications for our origins. American Anthropologist. 104(1), 50-67 Conard, N. J. and Adler D. S., 1997, Lithic Reduction and Hominid Behavior in The Middle Paleolithic of the Rhineland. Journal of Archaeological Research. 53(2), 147-175 Conkey M. 1997. Mobilizing Ideologies: Paleolithic 'Art', Gender Trouble, and Thinking About Alternatives. In L. Hager (ed.), Women in Human Evolution. London, 172-207 Conrad D. S. and Adler D. S. 1997. Lithic Reduction and Hominid Behavior in the Middle Palaeolithic of the Rhineland. Journal of Anthropological Research 53,147-175 Crabtree P. 1996. Production and Consumption in an Early Complex Society: Animal Use in Middle Saxon East Anglia. World Archaeology 28(1), 58-75 Cross I., Zubrow E., and Cowan F. 2002. Musical behaviours and the archaeological record: a preliminary study. In J. Mathieu (ed.), Experimental Archaeology: replicating past objects, be-haviors, and processes (= British Archaeological Reports. International Series 1035). Ox¬ford, 25-34 Crumley C. L. 1987. A dialectical critique of hierarchy. In T. C. Patterson and C. W. Gailey (eds.), Power Relations and State Formation. Washington D.C., 155-159 Crumley C. L., Ehrenreich R. M. and Levy J. E. 1995. Heterarchy and the Analysis of Complex Societies (= Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 6). Washington Crumley and J. Tainter C. L. 2007. Climate, Complexity, and Problem Solving in the Roman Empire. In R. Costanza, L. J. Graumlich, and W. Steffen (eds.), Sustainability or Collapse: An Inte¬grated History and Future of People on Earth, Boston, 61-75 Díaz-Andreu M. and Champion T. 1996. Nationalism and Archaeology in Europe. London Dibble H. L., Raczek T. P. and McPherron S. J. P. 2005. Excavator bias at the site of Pech de l'Azé IV, France. Journal of Field Archaeology 30, 317-328 Dibble H. L. and McPherron S. J. P. 2006. The Missing Mousterian. Current Anthropology 47, 777-803 Dietler M. 1994. "Our Ancestors the Gauls": Archaeology, ethnic nationalism, and the manipulation of Celtic Identity in modern Europe. American Anthropologist 96, 584-605 Dietler M. 1998. A tale of three; sites: the monumentalization of Celtic oppida and the politics of collective memory and identity. World Archaeology 30, 72-89 Dietler M. 2005. Consumption, and Colonial Interaction in the Rhône Basin of France: A Study of Early Iron Age Political Economies (= Monographies dArchéologie Meditéranéenne). Lattes Dobres M.-A. 1995. Gender in the Making: Late Magdalenian Social relations of Production in the French Midi-Pyrénées. Ann Arbor (University Microfilms) Earle T. 2002. Bronze Age Economics: The Beginnings of Political Economies. Boulder |
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ftrcin:oai:rcin.org.pl:55436 2023-05-15T14:28:28+02:00 American Contributions to European Archaeology Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 62 (2010) Milisauskas, Sarunas Thurston, Tina Whitlow, Raymond 2010 application/pdf https://rcin.org.pl/dlibra/publication/edition/55436/content eng eng Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk Sprawozdania Archeologiczne Adams B. (and Árpád Ringer) 2001. Sajóbábony-Méhésztetӧ, Eponymous Site of the Middle Palaeolithic Bábonyiam Industry: Microwear Studies Made on Tools at the Site During the 1997 Excavation. Praehistoria 1,117-128 Adler D. S. Prindville 'T. P. and Conrad N. J. 2003. Patterns of Spatial Organization and Land Use During the Eemian Intergalcial in the Rhineland: New Data from Wllertheim, Germany. Eurasian Prehistory 1(2), 25-78 Adovasio J. M. and Masłowski R. F. 1988. Textile Impressions on Ceramic Vessels at Divostin. In A. McPherron and D. Srejović (eds.), Divostin and the Neolithic of Central Serbia. Pittsburgh, 345-354 Allen S. E. 2005. A Living Landscape. The Palaeoethnobotany of Sovjan, Albania. Ann Arbor (University Microfilms) Ammerman A. J. and Cavalli-Sforza L. L. 1972. Measuring the rate of spread of early farming in Europe. Man 6, 674-688 Antanaitis-Jacobs I., Kisielienë D. and Stančikaitë M. 2004. Archeobotanika Lietuvoje: Makrobotaniniai ir palinologiniai tyrinëjimai. Lietuvos Archeologija 26, 75-96 Anthony D. W. 2007. The Horse, the wheel, and language. Princeton Anthony D. W. and Brown D. R. 1991. The origins of horseback riding. Antiquity 65, 22-38 Arnold B. 1990. The past as propaganda: totalitarian archaeology in Nazi Germany. Antiquity 64(244), 464-478 Arnold B. 2005. Mobile Men, Sedentary Women? Material culture as a marker of regional and supra-regional interaction in early Iron Age southwest Germany. In H. Dobrzańska, J. V. S. Megaw and P. Poleska (eds.), Celts on the Margin: Studies in European Cultural Interaction 7th c. BC - 1st c. AD. Essay in Honor of Zenon Woźniak. Kraków, 17-26 Atkinson J. A., Banks I. and O'Sullivan J. (eds.) 1996. Nationalism and Archaeology : Scottish Archaeological Forum. Glasgow Bailey D. W. 2005. Prehistoric Figurines: Representation and Corporeality in the Neolithic. London Baldia M. O., Staeck J. P. and Šmid M. 2001. Hügelgräberfeld der Trichterbecherkultur in Ludéřov. Pravěk 11, 43-59 Bankoff H. A. and Winter F. A. 1990. The Later Aeneolithic in Southeastern Europe. American Journal of Archaeology 94(2), 175-191 Banks W. E. 1996. Statistical Analysis of Flake and Blade Dorsal Patterns from Kraków-Spadzista Units E and F: A Study of the Organization of Site Space. Folia Quaternaria 67, 63-74 Banks W. E. 2002. Analyse Tracéologique de l'Industrie Lithique Aurignacienne de Solutré, Secteur M12. In J. Combier and A. Montet-White (eds.), Solutré: Les fouilles 1968-1998 (= Société Préhistorique Française. Memoir 30), Paris, 243-246 Barber E. J. W. 1991. Prehistoric Textiles. The Development of Cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with Special Reference to the Aegean. Princeton Barnett W. 1990. Small-scale transport of Early Neolithic pottery in the west Mediterranean. Antiquity 64, 859-865 Beck C. W. 1970. Amber in archaeology. Archaeology 23(1), 7-11 Bigelow G. F., Ferrante S. M., Hall S. T., Kimball L. M., Proctor R. E. and Remington S. L. 2005. Researching catastrophic environmental changes on northern coastlines: a geoarchaeological case study from the Shetland Islands. Arctic Anthropology 42(1), 88-102 Binford L. R. and Binford S. 1966. A preliminary analysis of functional variability in the Mousterian of Levallois Facies. American Anthropologist 68, 238-295 Biskowski M. 2003. Supplementary Report on the Sitagroi Groundstone Tools. In E. S. Elster and C. Renfrew (eds.), Prehistoric Sitagroi 2. Los Angeles, 196-203 Blades B. S. 2001. Aurignacian Lithic Economy: Ecological Perspective from Southwestern France. New York Blake E. 1998. Sardinia's nuraghi: four millennia of becoming. World Archaeology 30(1), 59-71 Bogucki P. 1988. Forest Farmers and Stockherders: Early Agriculture and its Consequences in North-Central Europe. Cambridge Bogucki P. 2008. The Danubian - Baltic Borderland: Northern Poland in the Fifth Millennium BC. Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 40, 51-65 Bogucki P. and Grygiel R. 1993. The first farmers of central Europe: a review article. Journal of Field Archaeology 20(3), 399-426 Bogucki P. and Crabtree P. J. (eds.) 2004. Ancient Europe 8000 B.C. - A. D. 1000. Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World. New York Bolender D. J., Steinberg J. M. and Durrenberger E. P. 2008. Unsettled Landscapes: Settlement patterns and the development of social inequality in Northern Iceland. In C. Pool and L. Cligget (eds.), Economies and the Transformation of the Landscape. Lanham, 217-238 Bower J. and Kobusiewicz M. 2002. A Comparative Study of Prehistoric Foragers in Europe and North America: Cultural Responses to the End of the Ice Age. Lampeter Brandt R., Groenewoudt B. J. and Kvamme K. L. 1992. An Experiment in Archaeological Site Location: Modeling in the Netherlands using GIS techniques. World Archaeology 24(2), 268-282 Byock J., Walker P., Erlandson J., Hoick P., Zore D., Gudmundsson M. and Tveskov M. 2005. A Viking Age Valley in Iceland: The Mosfell Archaeology Project. Medieval Archaeology: Journal of the Society for Medieval Archaeology X49, 195-218 Clarke G. 2002. Neandertal archaeology-implications for our origins. American Anthropologist. 104(1), 50-67 Conard, N. J. and Adler D. S., 1997, Lithic Reduction and Hominid Behavior in The Middle Paleolithic of the Rhineland. Journal of Archaeological Research. 53(2), 147-175 Conkey M. 1997. Mobilizing Ideologies: Paleolithic 'Art', Gender Trouble, and Thinking About Alternatives. In L. Hager (ed.), Women in Human Evolution. London, 172-207 Conrad D. S. and Adler D. S. 1997. Lithic Reduction and Hominid Behavior in the Middle Palaeolithic of the Rhineland. Journal of Anthropological Research 53,147-175 Crabtree P. 1996. Production and Consumption in an Early Complex Society: Animal Use in Middle Saxon East Anglia. World Archaeology 28(1), 58-75 Cross I., Zubrow E., and Cowan F. 2002. Musical behaviours and the archaeological record: a preliminary study. In J. Mathieu (ed.), Experimental Archaeology: replicating past objects, be-haviors, and processes (= British Archaeological Reports. International Series 1035). Ox¬ford, 25-34 Crumley C. L. 1987. A dialectical critique of hierarchy. In T. C. Patterson and C. W. Gailey (eds.), Power Relations and State Formation. Washington D.C., 155-159 Crumley C. L., Ehrenreich R. M. and Levy J. E. 1995. Heterarchy and the Analysis of Complex Societies (= Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 6). Washington Crumley and J. Tainter C. L. 2007. Climate, Complexity, and Problem Solving in the Roman Empire. In R. Costanza, L. J. Graumlich, and W. Steffen (eds.), Sustainability or Collapse: An Inte¬grated History and Future of People on Earth, Boston, 61-75 Díaz-Andreu M. and Champion T. 1996. Nationalism and Archaeology in Europe. London Dibble H. L., Raczek T. P. and McPherron S. J. P. 2005. Excavator bias at the site of Pech de l'Azé IV, France. Journal of Field Archaeology 30, 317-328 Dibble H. L. and McPherron S. J. P. 2006. The Missing Mousterian. Current Anthropology 47, 777-803 Dietler M. 1994. "Our Ancestors the Gauls": Archaeology, ethnic nationalism, and the manipulation of Celtic Identity in modern Europe. American Anthropologist 96, 584-605 Dietler M. 1998. A tale of three; sites: the monumentalization of Celtic oppida and the politics of collective memory and identity. World Archaeology 30, 72-89 Dietler M. 2005. Consumption, and Colonial Interaction in the Rhône Basin of France: A Study of Early Iron Age Political Economies (= Monographies dArchéologie Meditéranéenne). Lattes Dobres M.-A. 1995. Gender in the Making: Late Magdalenian Social relations of Production in the French Midi-Pyrénées. Ann Arbor (University Microfilms) Earle T. 2002. Bronze Age Economics: The Beginnings of Political Economies. Boulder Rights Reserved - Restricted Access Prawa zastrzeżone - dostęp ograniczony IAiE PAN, call no. P 244 IAiE PAN, call no. P 245 IAiE PAN, call no. P 243 http://iaie.katalog.pan.pl/ipac20/ipac.jsp?profile=iaepan&index=BOCLC&term=ee95400634 IAiE PAN, sygn. P 244 IAiE PAN, sygn. P 245 IAiE PAN, sygn. P 243 American archaeologists European archaeology history of archaeology archeolodzy amerykańscy archeologia europejska historia archeologii Text Tekst 2010 ftrcin 2022-11-28T03:42:08Z ill. 25 cm We survey the American archaeologists who have contributed to European prehistoric and historic research. Since the 1960s, the number of American archaeologists working in Europe has increased, now including over 130 archaeologists working in 33 countries. Contributing American archaeologists are defined as those with US citizenship who have published articles presenting field data or artifact analysis. These archaeologists have contributed strongly to European Palaeolithic and Neolithic research, but only few have specialized in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Following a table of archaeologists and their research interests we discuss the contributions of specific archaeologists in more depth. The quantity of archaeological data generated by Americans in Europe is impressive, since numerous excavations of specific sites have been carried out. Finally, we consider some factors affecting international collaboration and those aspects of Europe which make it so appealing to American archaeologists il. 25 cm We survey the American archaeologists who have contributed to European prehistoric and historic research. Since the 1960s, the number of American archaeologists working in Europe has increased, now including over 130 archaeologists working in 33 countries. Contributing American archaeologists are defined as those with US citizenship who have published articles presenting field data or artifact analysis. These archaeologists have contributed strongly to European Palaeolithic and Neolithic research, but only few have specialized in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Following a table of archaeologists and their research interests we discuss the contributions of specific archaeologists in more depth. The quantity of archaeological data generated by Americans in Europe is impressive, since numerous excavations of specific sites have been carried out. Finally, we consider some factors affecting international collaboration and those aspects of Europe which make it so appealing to American archaeologists Text Arctic Arctic Anthropology Digital Repository of Scientific Institutes (RCIN) |