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Refuse and the formation of middens / Stuart Needham and Tony Spence.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: ArticleArticleSubject(s): In: Anthropology TodaySummary: The prodigious quantities of refuse recovered from excavations at Runnymede Bridge, Berkshire, England Ñ and at other late prehistoric British sites Ñ highlight those archaeological entities we call 'rubbish' and 'middens'. What is a 'midden'? General thoughts on an archaeology of refuse are applied to the specific case of these 1st-millennium BC sites in southern England in an attempt to comprehend their origin and scale in terms of the period's social geography.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Analítica de revista Biblioteca Central Colección General General ANTIQUITY-271/97 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available FICTICIO380

Antiquity 71 (1997): 77-90

The prodigious quantities of refuse recovered from excavations at Runnymede Bridge, Berkshire, England Ñ and at other late prehistoric British sites Ñ highlight those archaeological entities we call 'rubbish' and 'middens'. What is a 'midden'? General thoughts on an archaeology of refuse are applied to the specific case of these 1st-millennium BC sites in southern England in an attempt to comprehend their origin and scale in terms of the period's social geography.

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