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Bridging the Gap? Scale and Development-led Archaeology in England Today

Bridging the Gap? Scale and Development-led Archaeology in England Today AbstractAbstractLarge development-led archaeological investigations can help to ‘bridge the gap’ in scales between ‘point-data’ and ‘landscape-scale’ surveys, placing the former in a wider context and aiding interpretation of the latter. Examples from southern England show how large-area excavations, geophysical surveys and field evaluations all provide highly detailed information over extensive areas. Among other things, work on this scale can confirm the existence of ‘blank’ areas, which contain few archaeological remains but which would have been important parts of the overall landscape in the past. Large-scale development-led work can contribute to archaeological interpretation of the landscape across a broad range of scales. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Landscapes Taylor & Francis

Bridging the Gap? Scale and Development-led Archaeology in England Today

Landscapes , Volume 14 (1): 11 – Jun 1, 2013

Bridging the Gap? Scale and Development-led Archaeology in England Today

Landscapes , Volume 14 (1): 11 – Jun 1, 2013

Abstract

AbstractAbstractLarge development-led archaeological investigations can help to ‘bridge the gap’ in scales between ‘point-data’ and ‘landscape-scale’ surveys, placing the former in a wider context and aiding interpretation of the latter. Examples from southern England show how large-area excavations, geophysical surveys and field evaluations all provide highly detailed information over extensive areas. Among other things, work on this scale can confirm the existence of ‘blank’ areas, which contain few archaeological remains but which would have been important parts of the overall landscape in the past. Large-scale development-led work can contribute to archaeological interpretation of the landscape across a broad range of scales.

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© Oxbow Books Ltd 2013
ISSN
2040-8153
eISSN
1466-2035
DOI
10.1179/1466203513Z.0000000007
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractAbstractLarge development-led archaeological investigations can help to ‘bridge the gap’ in scales between ‘point-data’ and ‘landscape-scale’ surveys, placing the former in a wider context and aiding interpretation of the latter. Examples from southern England show how large-area excavations, geophysical surveys and field evaluations all provide highly detailed information over extensive areas. Among other things, work on this scale can confirm the existence of ‘blank’ areas, which contain few archaeological remains but which would have been important parts of the overall landscape in the past. Large-scale development-led work can contribute to archaeological interpretation of the landscape across a broad range of scales.

Journal

LandscapesTaylor & Francis

Published: Jun 1, 2013

Keywords: development-led archaeology; large-area investigations; landscape; scale; blank areas

There are no references for this article.