Prehistorians and pastoralists in Neolithic and Bronze Age England
- 1 October 1972
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in World Archaeology
- Vol. 4 (2) , 192-204
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.1972.9979532
Abstract
This paper is an attempt to isolate and to evaluate the archaeological criteria for pastoral farming in Neolithic and Bronze Age England. As an alternative to intuitive approaches to the problem, some lines of argument are set alongside the environmental evidence for patterns of early land use in the English Lake District, and the relationship between this interpretation and the distribution of some contemporary artefacts and field monuments is briefly discussed.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Territorial Patterns in Bronze Age WessexProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1971
- The diet of early man: Aspects of archaeological evidence from lower and middle Pleistocene sites in AfricaWorld Archaeology, 1971
- Pollen Analytical Investigations at Holcroft Moss, Lancashire, and Lindow Moss, CheshireJournal of Ecology, 1965
- The interpretation of some post-Glacial vegetation diversities at different Lake District sitesProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1965
- New Neolithic Sites in Dorset and Bedfordshire, with a Note on the Distribution of Neolithic Storage-Pits in BritainProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1964
- Pollen Analysis as an Aid to the Dating of Prehistoric MonumentsProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1955
- The Agriculture of the British Early Iron Age as exemplified at Figheldean Down, WiltshireProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1955
- An Above-Ground Storage Pit of the La Tène PeriodProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1954
- Early Crops in Southern EnglandProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1953
- Excavations at Farnham, Surrey (1937–38): The Horsham Culture and the Question of Mesolithic DwellingsProceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1939