Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Butzer, Karl W.

Title Archaeology as human ecology : method and theory for a contextual approach / Karl W. Butzer
Published Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1982

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB SPC THORNE  930.1 But/Aah  AVAILABLE
Description xiii, 364 pages ; 24 cm
Contents Machine derived contents note: Part I. Perspectives: 1. Context in archaeology; 2. Environmental systems: spatial and temporal variability; Part II. Foundations: 3. Geo-archaeology I: basic principles; 4. Geo-archaeology II: landscape context; 5. Geo-archaeology III: stratigraphic context; 6. Geo-archaeology IV: site formation; 7. Geo-archaeology V: site modification and destruction; 8. Geo-archaeology VI: human impact on the landscape; 9. Archaeometry: prospecting, provenance, dating; 10. Archaeobotany: vegetation and plant utilization; 11. Zoo-archaeology: faunas and animal procurement; Part III. Synthesis: 12. Spatial integration I: quantitative models for pattern analysis; 13. Spatial integration II: socioecological models for settlement analysis; 14. Spatial integration III: reconstruction of settlement systems; 15. Diachronic systems I: cultural adaptation; 16. Diachronic systems II: continuity and change; References; Index
Summary Archaeology as Human Ecology is a new introduction to concepts and methods in archaeology. It deals not with artifacts, but with sites, settlements, and subsistence. Karl W. Butzer's goal is to interpret the ecosystem of which an archaeologicial site or site network was part. Components of this study include geo-archaeology, archaeobotany, zoo-archaeology, and archaeometry. These methods are then used in examining interactions between human communities and their biophysical environment : the impact of settlement on site formation and the effects of subsistence activities on plants, animals, soils, and overall landscape modification. Finally, the methods and theoretical approach, are applied to examine the processes of cultural change and continuity. The approach of Archaeology as Human Ecology goes far beyond traditional environmental archaeology, which is concerned with simple reconstruction. It provides a clear, systemic approach that immediately allows an assessment of interactions. For the first time, it attempts to develop a comprehensive spatial archaeology - one that is far more than derivative spatial analysis
Analysis Environmental archaeology
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Bibliography: pages 321-357
Notes Self-Renewing 2018 UoY
Subject Environmental archaeology.
Human ecology.
Landscape assessment.
LC no. 81021576
ISBN 0521246520
0521288770 (paperback)