Oxford Handbook of Wetland Archaeology
Herausgegeben von Menotti, Francesco; O'Sullivan, Aidan
Oxford Handbook of Wetland Archaeology
Herausgegeben von Menotti, Francesco; O'Sullivan, Aidan
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The Oxford Handbook of Wetland Archaeology is the most comprehensive survey of global wetland archaeology ever published. Well known for the spectacular quality of its surviving evidence, from both an archaeological and environmental perspective, wetland archaeology enables scholars to investigate and reconstruct past people's dwellings, landscapes, material culture, and daily lives in great detail. Through concise essays written by some of the world's leading scholars in the field, this Handbook describes the key principles, methodologies, and revealing results of past and present…mehr
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The Oxford Handbook of Wetland Archaeology is the most comprehensive survey of global wetland archaeology ever published. Well known for the spectacular quality of its surviving evidence, from both an archaeological and environmental perspective, wetland archaeology enables scholars to investigate and reconstruct past people's dwellings, landscapes, material culture, and daily lives in great detail. Through concise essays written by some of the world's
leading scholars in the field, this Handbook describes the key principles, methodologies, and revealing results of past and present archaeological investigations of wetland environments. The volume provides unique insights into past human interactions with lakes, bogs, rivers, and coastal marshlands across the
world from prehistory to modern times. Opening with a detailed introduction by the editors, the Handbook is divided into seven parts and contains 54 essays and over 230 photographs, figures, maps, and graphs.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
leading scholars in the field, this Handbook describes the key principles, methodologies, and revealing results of past and present archaeological investigations of wetland environments. The volume provides unique insights into past human interactions with lakes, bogs, rivers, and coastal marshlands across the
world from prehistory to modern times. Opening with a detailed introduction by the editors, the Handbook is divided into seven parts and contains 54 essays and over 230 photographs, figures, maps, and graphs.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks in Archaeology
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 970
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 175mm x 61mm
- Gewicht: 1815g
- ISBN-13: 9780199573493
- ISBN-10: 0199573492
- Artikelnr.: 36350901
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Oxford Handbooks in Archaeology
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 970
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 175mm x 61mm
- Gewicht: 1815g
- ISBN-13: 9780199573493
- ISBN-10: 0199573492
- Artikelnr.: 36350901
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Francesco Menotti is Professor of Archaology at the Institute of Prehistory and Archaeological Science, Basel University. He has been involved in wetland archaeological research for fifteen years, working on various projects in different parts of Europe. His publications include 'The missing period': Middle Bronze Age lake-dwellings in the Alps (2001), Living on the lake in prehistoric Europe (2004), and Wetland Archaeology and Beyond: Theory and Practice (OUP, 2012). Dr Aidan O'Sullivan is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Archaeology, University College Dublin, Ireland. He has directed many wetland archaeological projects in estuaries, lakes, rivers and boglands, and is the author of numerous books and papers on wetland archaeology, including The Archaeology of Lake Settlement in Ireland (1998) and Rethinking Wetland Archaeology (2006).
* Acknowledgements
* List of Figures
* List of Tables
* List of Contributors
* 1: Francesco Menotti and Aidan O Sullivan: General introduction to
the Handbook
* Part 1: Wetland occupations: a geographical and chronological
perspective
* Introduction
* Europe
* 2: Francesco Menotti: Wetland occupations in prehistoric Europe
* 3: Aidan O Sullivan: Europe s wetlands from the Migration Period to
the Middle Ages: settlement, exploitation and transformation, AD
400-1500
* The Americas
* 4: Barbara, A. Purdy: Occupations of past wetland environments in the
United States
* 5: Kathryn Bernick: People-wetland interaction in Canada
* 6: Tim Beach and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach: Pre-Columbian people and the
wetlands in Central and South America
* Africa and Asia
* 7: Peter Mitchell: People and wetlands in Africa
* 8: Tony, J. Wilkinson: Wetland Archaeology and the role of marshes in
the ancient Middle East
* 9: Yaroslav, V. Kuzmin: The past Eastern Russian wetlands: review of
the prehistoric occupation, chronology, economy, and environment
* 10: Yunfei Zheng: Prehistoric wetland occupations in the Lower
regions of Yangtze River, China
* 11: Akira Matsui and Tomohiro Inoue: Wetland sites in Japan
* Oceania
* 12: Geoffrey Irwin: Wetland occupations in New Zealand
* 13: Sally Brockwell: Australian wetland occupations before and after
the Europeans
* 14: Chris Ballard, Tim Denham and Simon Haberle: Wetland archaeology
in the Highlands of New Guinea
* Part 2: Waterlogged archaeological evidence
* Introduction
* Settlements and habitations
* 15: Pierre Pétrequin: The Alpine region lake-dwellings
* 16: Jon Henderson and Robert Sands: Irish and Scottish crannogs
* 17: Renate Ebersbach: Houses, households and settlements:
architecture and living spaces
* Material culture
* 18: Robert Sands: Portable wooden objects from wetlands
* 19: Madonna, L. Moss: Fishing traps and weirs on the Northwest Coast
of North America: new approaches and new insights
* 20: Jörg Schibler: Bone and antler artefacts in wetland sites
* Road networks and transport
* 21: Richard Brunning and Conor McDermott: Trackways and roads across
the wetlands
* 22: Fiona Haughey: Rivers and lakes: a network of wetland highways
* Human bodies
* 23: Wijnand, A.B. van der Sanden: Bog bodies: underwater burials,
sacrifices and executions
* Part 3: Survey and excavation
* Introduction
* Survey
* 24: Andreas Weller and Andreas Bauerochse: Detecting organic
materials in waterlogged sediments
* 25: Ruth Plets: Underwater survey and acoustic detection and
characterisation of archaeological materials
* 36: Richard Brunning: Archaeological strategies for terrestrial
wetland landscapes
* Excavation
* 27: Martin Bell: Intertidal survey and excavation
* 28: Glen, H. Doran: Excavation of wet sites
* Part 4: Multidisciplinary scientific network
* Introduction
* 29: Stefanie Jacomet: Archaebotany: the potential of analyses of
plant remains from waterlogged archaeological sites
* 30: Stephen Davis: Insect analysis in wetland archaeology
* 31: Ciara Clarke: Palaeoecological reconstructions
* 32: Charles French: Geoarchaeological and soil micromorphological
studies in wetland archaeology
* 33: Angela Schlumbaum and Ceiridwen J. Edwards: Ancient DNA research
on wetland archaeological evidence
* 34: Michel Magny: Palaeoclimatology and archaeology in the wetlands
* Dating methods
* 35: Tom Higham: Radiocarbon dating of wetland sites
* 36: Andre Billamboz: Dendrochronology in wetland archaeology
* 37: Hiroyuki Kitagawa: Lacustrine varve counting as a dating
technique: advantages and disadvantages
* Part 5: A vulnerable cultural heritage: preservation and conservation
* Introduction
* Preservation
* 38: Denis Ramseyer: Preservation against erosion: protecting lake
shores and coastal environments
* Artefact conservation
* 39: Dilys Johns: A review of current post-excavation treatment
methods for waterlogged organic archaeological materials: the last 20
years
* Political actions
* 40: Adrian Olivier: National and international wetland management
policies
* 41: Dale Croes: Wet Site Archaeology on the Northwest Coast of North
America and the Native Communities involvement in Managing their
Wetland Heritage Sites
* Part 6: Changing research attitude: towards one archaeology
* Introduction
* 42: Robert Van de Noort: Wetland Archaeology in the twenty-first
century: adapting to climate change
* 43: Stijn Arnoldussen: Life history approaches and wetland
habitation: a later prehistoric case study from the Dutch delta
* 44: Mark Harris: Rhythm of wetland life: seasonality and sociality
* 45: George, P. Nicholas: Towards an Anthropology of Wetland
Archaeology: Hunter-Gatherers and Wetlands in Theory and Practice
* 46: Paolo Bellintani: Long-distance trade routes linked to wetland
settlements
* 47: Kristian Kristiansen: Integrating dry lands and wetlands in late
prehistoric farming regimes
* 48: Peter Bogucki: People, lakes and forest in the Baltic region: a
prehistoric perspective
* Part 7: Wetland archaeology and the public
* Introduction
* 49: Marc-Antoine Kaeser: Wetland archaeology in the media and the
popular literature: beyond the scholarly taboos of the twentieth
century, back to the pioneers
* 50: Urs Leuzinger: Informing the public: bridging the gap between
experts and enthusiasts
* 51: Gunter Schöbel: Museum exhibitions, open-air museums and hands-on
archaeology
* 52: Bettina Arnold: The lake-dwelling diaspora: museums, private
collectors and the evolution of ethics in archaeology
* Epilogue: Reflections and future perspectives
* Introduction
* 53: Charles, F. W. Higham: The archaeology of wetlands: a personal
journey
* 54: Bryony Coles: Concluding remarks and future perspectives
* Index
* List of Figures
* List of Tables
* List of Contributors
* 1: Francesco Menotti and Aidan O Sullivan: General introduction to
the Handbook
* Part 1: Wetland occupations: a geographical and chronological
perspective
* Introduction
* Europe
* 2: Francesco Menotti: Wetland occupations in prehistoric Europe
* 3: Aidan O Sullivan: Europe s wetlands from the Migration Period to
the Middle Ages: settlement, exploitation and transformation, AD
400-1500
* The Americas
* 4: Barbara, A. Purdy: Occupations of past wetland environments in the
United States
* 5: Kathryn Bernick: People-wetland interaction in Canada
* 6: Tim Beach and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach: Pre-Columbian people and the
wetlands in Central and South America
* Africa and Asia
* 7: Peter Mitchell: People and wetlands in Africa
* 8: Tony, J. Wilkinson: Wetland Archaeology and the role of marshes in
the ancient Middle East
* 9: Yaroslav, V. Kuzmin: The past Eastern Russian wetlands: review of
the prehistoric occupation, chronology, economy, and environment
* 10: Yunfei Zheng: Prehistoric wetland occupations in the Lower
regions of Yangtze River, China
* 11: Akira Matsui and Tomohiro Inoue: Wetland sites in Japan
* Oceania
* 12: Geoffrey Irwin: Wetland occupations in New Zealand
* 13: Sally Brockwell: Australian wetland occupations before and after
the Europeans
* 14: Chris Ballard, Tim Denham and Simon Haberle: Wetland archaeology
in the Highlands of New Guinea
* Part 2: Waterlogged archaeological evidence
* Introduction
* Settlements and habitations
* 15: Pierre Pétrequin: The Alpine region lake-dwellings
* 16: Jon Henderson and Robert Sands: Irish and Scottish crannogs
* 17: Renate Ebersbach: Houses, households and settlements:
architecture and living spaces
* Material culture
* 18: Robert Sands: Portable wooden objects from wetlands
* 19: Madonna, L. Moss: Fishing traps and weirs on the Northwest Coast
of North America: new approaches and new insights
* 20: Jörg Schibler: Bone and antler artefacts in wetland sites
* Road networks and transport
* 21: Richard Brunning and Conor McDermott: Trackways and roads across
the wetlands
* 22: Fiona Haughey: Rivers and lakes: a network of wetland highways
* Human bodies
* 23: Wijnand, A.B. van der Sanden: Bog bodies: underwater burials,
sacrifices and executions
* Part 3: Survey and excavation
* Introduction
* Survey
* 24: Andreas Weller and Andreas Bauerochse: Detecting organic
materials in waterlogged sediments
* 25: Ruth Plets: Underwater survey and acoustic detection and
characterisation of archaeological materials
* 36: Richard Brunning: Archaeological strategies for terrestrial
wetland landscapes
* Excavation
* 27: Martin Bell: Intertidal survey and excavation
* 28: Glen, H. Doran: Excavation of wet sites
* Part 4: Multidisciplinary scientific network
* Introduction
* 29: Stefanie Jacomet: Archaebotany: the potential of analyses of
plant remains from waterlogged archaeological sites
* 30: Stephen Davis: Insect analysis in wetland archaeology
* 31: Ciara Clarke: Palaeoecological reconstructions
* 32: Charles French: Geoarchaeological and soil micromorphological
studies in wetland archaeology
* 33: Angela Schlumbaum and Ceiridwen J. Edwards: Ancient DNA research
on wetland archaeological evidence
* 34: Michel Magny: Palaeoclimatology and archaeology in the wetlands
* Dating methods
* 35: Tom Higham: Radiocarbon dating of wetland sites
* 36: Andre Billamboz: Dendrochronology in wetland archaeology
* 37: Hiroyuki Kitagawa: Lacustrine varve counting as a dating
technique: advantages and disadvantages
* Part 5: A vulnerable cultural heritage: preservation and conservation
* Introduction
* Preservation
* 38: Denis Ramseyer: Preservation against erosion: protecting lake
shores and coastal environments
* Artefact conservation
* 39: Dilys Johns: A review of current post-excavation treatment
methods for waterlogged organic archaeological materials: the last 20
years
* Political actions
* 40: Adrian Olivier: National and international wetland management
policies
* 41: Dale Croes: Wet Site Archaeology on the Northwest Coast of North
America and the Native Communities involvement in Managing their
Wetland Heritage Sites
* Part 6: Changing research attitude: towards one archaeology
* Introduction
* 42: Robert Van de Noort: Wetland Archaeology in the twenty-first
century: adapting to climate change
* 43: Stijn Arnoldussen: Life history approaches and wetland
habitation: a later prehistoric case study from the Dutch delta
* 44: Mark Harris: Rhythm of wetland life: seasonality and sociality
* 45: George, P. Nicholas: Towards an Anthropology of Wetland
Archaeology: Hunter-Gatherers and Wetlands in Theory and Practice
* 46: Paolo Bellintani: Long-distance trade routes linked to wetland
settlements
* 47: Kristian Kristiansen: Integrating dry lands and wetlands in late
prehistoric farming regimes
* 48: Peter Bogucki: People, lakes and forest in the Baltic region: a
prehistoric perspective
* Part 7: Wetland archaeology and the public
* Introduction
* 49: Marc-Antoine Kaeser: Wetland archaeology in the media and the
popular literature: beyond the scholarly taboos of the twentieth
century, back to the pioneers
* 50: Urs Leuzinger: Informing the public: bridging the gap between
experts and enthusiasts
* 51: Gunter Schöbel: Museum exhibitions, open-air museums and hands-on
archaeology
* 52: Bettina Arnold: The lake-dwelling diaspora: museums, private
collectors and the evolution of ethics in archaeology
* Epilogue: Reflections and future perspectives
* Introduction
* 53: Charles, F. W. Higham: The archaeology of wetlands: a personal
journey
* 54: Bryony Coles: Concluding remarks and future perspectives
* Index
* Acknowledgements
* List of Figures
* List of Tables
* List of Contributors
* 1: Francesco Menotti and Aidan O Sullivan: General introduction to
the Handbook
* Part 1: Wetland occupations: a geographical and chronological
perspective
* Introduction
* Europe
* 2: Francesco Menotti: Wetland occupations in prehistoric Europe
* 3: Aidan O Sullivan: Europe s wetlands from the Migration Period to
the Middle Ages: settlement, exploitation and transformation, AD
400-1500
* The Americas
* 4: Barbara, A. Purdy: Occupations of past wetland environments in the
United States
* 5: Kathryn Bernick: People-wetland interaction in Canada
* 6: Tim Beach and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach: Pre-Columbian people and the
wetlands in Central and South America
* Africa and Asia
* 7: Peter Mitchell: People and wetlands in Africa
* 8: Tony, J. Wilkinson: Wetland Archaeology and the role of marshes in
the ancient Middle East
* 9: Yaroslav, V. Kuzmin: The past Eastern Russian wetlands: review of
the prehistoric occupation, chronology, economy, and environment
* 10: Yunfei Zheng: Prehistoric wetland occupations in the Lower
regions of Yangtze River, China
* 11: Akira Matsui and Tomohiro Inoue: Wetland sites in Japan
* Oceania
* 12: Geoffrey Irwin: Wetland occupations in New Zealand
* 13: Sally Brockwell: Australian wetland occupations before and after
the Europeans
* 14: Chris Ballard, Tim Denham and Simon Haberle: Wetland archaeology
in the Highlands of New Guinea
* Part 2: Waterlogged archaeological evidence
* Introduction
* Settlements and habitations
* 15: Pierre Pétrequin: The Alpine region lake-dwellings
* 16: Jon Henderson and Robert Sands: Irish and Scottish crannogs
* 17: Renate Ebersbach: Houses, households and settlements:
architecture and living spaces
* Material culture
* 18: Robert Sands: Portable wooden objects from wetlands
* 19: Madonna, L. Moss: Fishing traps and weirs on the Northwest Coast
of North America: new approaches and new insights
* 20: Jörg Schibler: Bone and antler artefacts in wetland sites
* Road networks and transport
* 21: Richard Brunning and Conor McDermott: Trackways and roads across
the wetlands
* 22: Fiona Haughey: Rivers and lakes: a network of wetland highways
* Human bodies
* 23: Wijnand, A.B. van der Sanden: Bog bodies: underwater burials,
sacrifices and executions
* Part 3: Survey and excavation
* Introduction
* Survey
* 24: Andreas Weller and Andreas Bauerochse: Detecting organic
materials in waterlogged sediments
* 25: Ruth Plets: Underwater survey and acoustic detection and
characterisation of archaeological materials
* 36: Richard Brunning: Archaeological strategies for terrestrial
wetland landscapes
* Excavation
* 27: Martin Bell: Intertidal survey and excavation
* 28: Glen, H. Doran: Excavation of wet sites
* Part 4: Multidisciplinary scientific network
* Introduction
* 29: Stefanie Jacomet: Archaebotany: the potential of analyses of
plant remains from waterlogged archaeological sites
* 30: Stephen Davis: Insect analysis in wetland archaeology
* 31: Ciara Clarke: Palaeoecological reconstructions
* 32: Charles French: Geoarchaeological and soil micromorphological
studies in wetland archaeology
* 33: Angela Schlumbaum and Ceiridwen J. Edwards: Ancient DNA research
on wetland archaeological evidence
* 34: Michel Magny: Palaeoclimatology and archaeology in the wetlands
* Dating methods
* 35: Tom Higham: Radiocarbon dating of wetland sites
* 36: Andre Billamboz: Dendrochronology in wetland archaeology
* 37: Hiroyuki Kitagawa: Lacustrine varve counting as a dating
technique: advantages and disadvantages
* Part 5: A vulnerable cultural heritage: preservation and conservation
* Introduction
* Preservation
* 38: Denis Ramseyer: Preservation against erosion: protecting lake
shores and coastal environments
* Artefact conservation
* 39: Dilys Johns: A review of current post-excavation treatment
methods for waterlogged organic archaeological materials: the last 20
years
* Political actions
* 40: Adrian Olivier: National and international wetland management
policies
* 41: Dale Croes: Wet Site Archaeology on the Northwest Coast of North
America and the Native Communities involvement in Managing their
Wetland Heritage Sites
* Part 6: Changing research attitude: towards one archaeology
* Introduction
* 42: Robert Van de Noort: Wetland Archaeology in the twenty-first
century: adapting to climate change
* 43: Stijn Arnoldussen: Life history approaches and wetland
habitation: a later prehistoric case study from the Dutch delta
* 44: Mark Harris: Rhythm of wetland life: seasonality and sociality
* 45: George, P. Nicholas: Towards an Anthropology of Wetland
Archaeology: Hunter-Gatherers and Wetlands in Theory and Practice
* 46: Paolo Bellintani: Long-distance trade routes linked to wetland
settlements
* 47: Kristian Kristiansen: Integrating dry lands and wetlands in late
prehistoric farming regimes
* 48: Peter Bogucki: People, lakes and forest in the Baltic region: a
prehistoric perspective
* Part 7: Wetland archaeology and the public
* Introduction
* 49: Marc-Antoine Kaeser: Wetland archaeology in the media and the
popular literature: beyond the scholarly taboos of the twentieth
century, back to the pioneers
* 50: Urs Leuzinger: Informing the public: bridging the gap between
experts and enthusiasts
* 51: Gunter Schöbel: Museum exhibitions, open-air museums and hands-on
archaeology
* 52: Bettina Arnold: The lake-dwelling diaspora: museums, private
collectors and the evolution of ethics in archaeology
* Epilogue: Reflections and future perspectives
* Introduction
* 53: Charles, F. W. Higham: The archaeology of wetlands: a personal
journey
* 54: Bryony Coles: Concluding remarks and future perspectives
* Index
* List of Figures
* List of Tables
* List of Contributors
* 1: Francesco Menotti and Aidan O Sullivan: General introduction to
the Handbook
* Part 1: Wetland occupations: a geographical and chronological
perspective
* Introduction
* Europe
* 2: Francesco Menotti: Wetland occupations in prehistoric Europe
* 3: Aidan O Sullivan: Europe s wetlands from the Migration Period to
the Middle Ages: settlement, exploitation and transformation, AD
400-1500
* The Americas
* 4: Barbara, A. Purdy: Occupations of past wetland environments in the
United States
* 5: Kathryn Bernick: People-wetland interaction in Canada
* 6: Tim Beach and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach: Pre-Columbian people and the
wetlands in Central and South America
* Africa and Asia
* 7: Peter Mitchell: People and wetlands in Africa
* 8: Tony, J. Wilkinson: Wetland Archaeology and the role of marshes in
the ancient Middle East
* 9: Yaroslav, V. Kuzmin: The past Eastern Russian wetlands: review of
the prehistoric occupation, chronology, economy, and environment
* 10: Yunfei Zheng: Prehistoric wetland occupations in the Lower
regions of Yangtze River, China
* 11: Akira Matsui and Tomohiro Inoue: Wetland sites in Japan
* Oceania
* 12: Geoffrey Irwin: Wetland occupations in New Zealand
* 13: Sally Brockwell: Australian wetland occupations before and after
the Europeans
* 14: Chris Ballard, Tim Denham and Simon Haberle: Wetland archaeology
in the Highlands of New Guinea
* Part 2: Waterlogged archaeological evidence
* Introduction
* Settlements and habitations
* 15: Pierre Pétrequin: The Alpine region lake-dwellings
* 16: Jon Henderson and Robert Sands: Irish and Scottish crannogs
* 17: Renate Ebersbach: Houses, households and settlements:
architecture and living spaces
* Material culture
* 18: Robert Sands: Portable wooden objects from wetlands
* 19: Madonna, L. Moss: Fishing traps and weirs on the Northwest Coast
of North America: new approaches and new insights
* 20: Jörg Schibler: Bone and antler artefacts in wetland sites
* Road networks and transport
* 21: Richard Brunning and Conor McDermott: Trackways and roads across
the wetlands
* 22: Fiona Haughey: Rivers and lakes: a network of wetland highways
* Human bodies
* 23: Wijnand, A.B. van der Sanden: Bog bodies: underwater burials,
sacrifices and executions
* Part 3: Survey and excavation
* Introduction
* Survey
* 24: Andreas Weller and Andreas Bauerochse: Detecting organic
materials in waterlogged sediments
* 25: Ruth Plets: Underwater survey and acoustic detection and
characterisation of archaeological materials
* 36: Richard Brunning: Archaeological strategies for terrestrial
wetland landscapes
* Excavation
* 27: Martin Bell: Intertidal survey and excavation
* 28: Glen, H. Doran: Excavation of wet sites
* Part 4: Multidisciplinary scientific network
* Introduction
* 29: Stefanie Jacomet: Archaebotany: the potential of analyses of
plant remains from waterlogged archaeological sites
* 30: Stephen Davis: Insect analysis in wetland archaeology
* 31: Ciara Clarke: Palaeoecological reconstructions
* 32: Charles French: Geoarchaeological and soil micromorphological
studies in wetland archaeology
* 33: Angela Schlumbaum and Ceiridwen J. Edwards: Ancient DNA research
on wetland archaeological evidence
* 34: Michel Magny: Palaeoclimatology and archaeology in the wetlands
* Dating methods
* 35: Tom Higham: Radiocarbon dating of wetland sites
* 36: Andre Billamboz: Dendrochronology in wetland archaeology
* 37: Hiroyuki Kitagawa: Lacustrine varve counting as a dating
technique: advantages and disadvantages
* Part 5: A vulnerable cultural heritage: preservation and conservation
* Introduction
* Preservation
* 38: Denis Ramseyer: Preservation against erosion: protecting lake
shores and coastal environments
* Artefact conservation
* 39: Dilys Johns: A review of current post-excavation treatment
methods for waterlogged organic archaeological materials: the last 20
years
* Political actions
* 40: Adrian Olivier: National and international wetland management
policies
* 41: Dale Croes: Wet Site Archaeology on the Northwest Coast of North
America and the Native Communities involvement in Managing their
Wetland Heritage Sites
* Part 6: Changing research attitude: towards one archaeology
* Introduction
* 42: Robert Van de Noort: Wetland Archaeology in the twenty-first
century: adapting to climate change
* 43: Stijn Arnoldussen: Life history approaches and wetland
habitation: a later prehistoric case study from the Dutch delta
* 44: Mark Harris: Rhythm of wetland life: seasonality and sociality
* 45: George, P. Nicholas: Towards an Anthropology of Wetland
Archaeology: Hunter-Gatherers and Wetlands in Theory and Practice
* 46: Paolo Bellintani: Long-distance trade routes linked to wetland
settlements
* 47: Kristian Kristiansen: Integrating dry lands and wetlands in late
prehistoric farming regimes
* 48: Peter Bogucki: People, lakes and forest in the Baltic region: a
prehistoric perspective
* Part 7: Wetland archaeology and the public
* Introduction
* 49: Marc-Antoine Kaeser: Wetland archaeology in the media and the
popular literature: beyond the scholarly taboos of the twentieth
century, back to the pioneers
* 50: Urs Leuzinger: Informing the public: bridging the gap between
experts and enthusiasts
* 51: Gunter Schöbel: Museum exhibitions, open-air museums and hands-on
archaeology
* 52: Bettina Arnold: The lake-dwelling diaspora: museums, private
collectors and the evolution of ethics in archaeology
* Epilogue: Reflections and future perspectives
* Introduction
* 53: Charles, F. W. Higham: The archaeology of wetlands: a personal
journey
* 54: Bryony Coles: Concluding remarks and future perspectives
* Index