The interpretation of archaeological spatial patterning
[Book]
edited by Ellen M. Kroll, and T. Douglas Price.
Boston, MA
Springer
1991
(xv, 315 pages)
Interdisciplinary contributions to archaeology; Language of science.
Papers presented at a symposium organized at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology held in May 1987 in Toronto, Ont.
Site structure, kinship, and sharing in Aboriginal Australia : implications for archaeology / Rob Gargett and Brian Hayden --;The relationship between mobility strategies and site structure / Susan Kent --;Distribution of refuse-producing activities at Hazda residential base camps : implications for analyses of archaeological site structure / James F. O'Connell, Kristen Hawkes and Nicholas Blurton Jones --;Variability in camp structure and bone food refuse patterning at Kua San hunter-gatherer camps / Laurence E. Bartram, Ellen M. Kroll and Henry T. Bunn --;Linking ethnoarchaeological interpretation and archaeological data : the sensitivity of spatial analytical methods to postdepositional disturbance / Susan A. Gregg, Keith W. Kintigh and Robert Whallon --;Interpreting spatial patterns at the Grotte XV : a multiple-method approach / Jean-Philippe Rigaud and Jan F. Simek --;Left in the dust : contextual information in model-focused archaeology / Christopher Carr --;Tool use and spatial patterning : complications and solution / Lawrence H. Keeley --;Beyond the formation of hearth-associated artifact assemblages / Marc G. Stevenson.
Investigations of archaeological intrasite spatial patterns have generally taken one of two directions: studies that introduced and explored methods for the analysis of archaeological spatial patterns or those that described and analyzed the for- mation of spatial patterns in actuaiistic-ethnographic, experimental, or natu- ral-contexts.