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Archaeological Constructs
An Aspect of Theoretical Archaeology
Jean-Claude Gardin examines the practical questions of how archaeological information can best be recorded, stored and disseminated.
J. C. Gardin (Author)
9780521109383, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 18 June 2009
216 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm, 0.32 kg
Archaeology, like all scientific disciplines, is accumulating an ever-increasing volume of data which the researcher must be able to retrieve and use in formulating and testing theories of interpretation. There are many practical questions of how information can best be recorded, stored and disseminated, but behind these lie fundamental intellectual questions. It is to the latter that Jean-Claude Gardin addresses this book. The advent of data banks, computers, micro-publishing, etc. will not in itself improve the access of the researcher to information of real value unless some consensus can be reached on the way the information is selected and presented and the reasoning processes that these different modes of presentation embody. Jean-Claude Gardin sees this as a long-term goal, the book as one step on the way to its achievement.
Preface
1. The analysis of archaeological constructions
2. Compilations and explanations
3. The analysis of compilations
4. The analysis of explanations
5. Schematisation
6. The form of archaeological publications
7. The limitations of theoretical archaeology
Synopsis
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Subject Areas: Archaeological science, methodology & techniques [HDW], Archaeological theory [HDA]