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The Environment of Man: the Iron Age to the Anglo-Saxon Period
Martin Jones and Geoffrey Dimbleby
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Front Cover
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Copyright
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Table of Contents
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List of Figures
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List of Plates
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List of Contributors
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Introduction
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Part I: The Context of Environmental Studies
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1. Social Landscapes: Pattern and Purpose?
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2. New Approaches to Familiar Problems
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Part II: The Evironmental Setting
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3. Climate from 1000 BC to 1000 AD
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4. The Vegetation
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5. Valley Sediments and Environmental Change
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Part III: The Exploitation of Environmental Resources
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6. The Development of Crop Husbandry
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7. Iron Age, Roman and Saxon Crops: The Archaeological Evidence from Wessex
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8. Iron Age, Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon Animal Husbandry - A Review of the Faunal Evidence
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9. The Significance of Deer Remains at Occupation Sites of the Iron Age to the Anglo-Saxon Period
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10. Fleece Changes in Sheep
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11. Disease as an Environmental Parameter
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Part IV: The Ecology of Settlement
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12. The Iron Age to Early Saxon Environment of the Upper Thames Terraces
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13. Crop Husbandry and Environmental Change in the Costal Area of The Feddersen Wierde, Near Bremerhaven, Northwest Germany
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14. Soil and Botanical Studies of the "Dark Earth"
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Concluding Remarks
Citable Link
Published: 1981
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781407323602 (ebook)
- 9780860541288 (paperback)
BAR Number: B87