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OverviewThis is the first volume charting the CAU’s on-going Barleycroft Farm/Over investigations, which now encompasses almost twenty years of fieldwork across both banks of the River Great Ouse at its junction with the Fen. Amongst the project’s main directives is the status of a major river in prehistory – when a communication corridor and when a divide? Accordingly, a key component throughout has been the documentation of the lower Ouse’s complex palaeoenvironmental history, and a delta-like wet landscape dotted with mid-stream islands has been mapped. This book is specifically concerned with the length of The Over Narrows, whose naming alludes to an extraordinary series of mid-channel ‘river race’ ridges. With their excavation generating vast artefact sets and unique palaeo-economic data, these ridges saw intense settlement sequences, ranging from Mesolithic camps, Grooved Ware, Beaker and Collared Urn pit clusters (plus field plots) to Middle Bronze fieldsystems and their attendant settlements, a massive Late Bronze Age midden complex and, finally, an Iron Age shrine. The latter involved extensive human bone or body-part deposition and bird sacrifice. Four upstanding turf barrows and two accompanying waterlogged pond barrows feature among the main excavations reported here. With more than 40 cremations (including in situ pyres), the resultant detailing of Early Bronze Age mortuary practices and the insights into the period’s monument construction are ground-breaking. This is an important book, for the scale of The Narrows’ excavations and palaeoenvironmental studies, its comprehensive dating programmes and, particularly, the innovative methodologies and analyses undertaken. Indeed, a commitment to experiment has lain at the project’s core. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Christopher Evans , Jonathan Tabor , Mark Vander LindenPublisher: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research Imprint: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research ISBN: 9781902937755ISBN 10: 1902937759 Pages: 680 Publication Date: 13 June 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsIt is a big, complicated book with equally big (and complicated) aims, offering more than the sum of its parts. It thinks ambitiously on subjects such as the nature of culture change, even if, at the final count, the evidence for such was not always forthcoming... There is also a degree of honesty in the writing that is not normally found in technical monographs. * Antiquity * This is a great example of an important interpretative collaboration between archaeologists and artists, and something that hopefully will be seen increasingly in books and exhibitions... I cannot conclude this review better than to quote from Richard Bradley's foreword to Twice-crossed River, `If it has the influence that it and its companion volumes deserve, prehistoric archaeology cannot be the same again.' * Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society * It is a big, complicated book with equally big (and complicated) aims, offering more than the sum of its parts. It thinks ambitiously on subjects such as the nature of culture change, even if, at the final count, the evidence for such was not always forthcoming... There is also a degree of honesty in the writing that is not normally found in technical monographs. -- Jim Leary * Antiquity * This is a great example of an important interpretative collaboration between archaeologists and artists, and something that hopefully will be seen increasingly in books and exhibitions... I cannot conclude this review better than to quote from Richard Bradley's foreword to Twice-crossed River, `If it has the influence that it and its companion volumes deserve, prehistoric archaeology cannot be the same again.' -- Jane Sidell * Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society * It is a big, complicated book with equally big (and complicated) aims, offering more than the sum of its parts. It thinks ambitiously on subjects such as the nature of culture change, even if, at the final count, the evidence for such was not always forthcoming... There is also a degree of honesty in the writing that is not normally found in technical monographs. -- Jim Leary * Antiquity * Author InformationChristopher Evans is executive Director of the Cambridge Archaeological unit based in the Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge. He has worked in British Archaeology at a senior level for more than twenty-five years, specialising in British prehistory, and archaeological theory with extensive experience in he management of complex excavation and post-excavation programmes. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |