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Digging Deeper

How Archaeology Works

Eric H. Cline

PDF
ca. 13,99
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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik

Beschreibung

From the bestselling author of 1177 B.C., an accessible primer to the archaeologist's craft

An archaeologist with more than thirty seasons of excavation experience, Eric H. Cline has conducted fieldwork around the world, from Greece and Crete to Egypt, Israel, and Jordan. In Digging Deeper, Cline answers the questions archaeologists are most frequently asked, such as: How do you know where to dig? How are excavations actually done? How do you know how old something is? Who gets to keep what is found? How do you know what people from the past ate, wore, and looked like? Adapted from Cline's acclaimed book Three Stones Make a Wall, this lively little volume is brimming with insights and practical advice about how archaeology really works. Whether you are an armchair archaeologist or embarking on your first excavation, Digging Deeper is an essential primer on the art of the dig.

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Schlagwörter

Minimum number of individuals, KV62, Radiocarbon dating, Stratigraphy, Magnetometer, Remote sensing, Archaeology, Tomb, Bronze Age, Egg as food, Beef, Sherd, The Archaeologist, Nimrud, Cylinder Seal, Human feces, The World Without Us, Ancient Egypt, Cultural resources management, Helicobacter pylori, David Macaulay, Sarah Parcak, Porridge, Dendrochronology, Lidar, Shoe, Stone tool, Excavation (archaeology), Dead Sea Scrolls, Leather, Archaeological site, Burial, Pottery, Recipe, The Various, Obsidian, Neolithic, Meat, Surveying, Plaster cast, Treasure trove, Vegetable, CT scan, Core sample, Sutton Hoo, Heinrich Schliemann, Cultural Property (Japan), Goatskin (material), Looting, Ancient DNA, Finding, Mosul Museum, Bread, Amenhotep III, Tollund Man, Scientist, Archaeological context, Cemetery, Anthropologist, Uluburun shipwreck, Lentil, Seriation (archaeology), Lindow Man, Trowel, Bog body, Pork, Howard Carter, Last meal, National Park Service, Priam's Treasure