Stijn Arnoldussen is an Associate Professor in Later Prehistory at Groningen University. He is fascinated by the long-term development of (agri)cultural landscapes – particularly fieldsystems and the interplay of settlements, funerary sites and deposition between the Neolithic and the Roman Iron Age. He has recently excavated various later prehistoric field systems (known as Celtic fields or
raatakkers in Dutch) in the Netherlands.
Robert Johnston is a Senior Lecturer in Landscape Archaeology at the University of Sheffield. He recently published “Bronze Age Worlds” (2021), in which he considers the ways that kin relations were fundamental in forming the social life and landscapes of Bronze Age Britain and Ireland. He is currently researching landscape transformations in the upland and coastal landscapes of western Britain.
Mette Løvschal is an Associate Professor at Aarhus University’s Department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies and Moesgaard Museum. She is the Principal Investigator on the ERC project ‘Anthropogenic Heathlands: The Social Organization of Super-Resilient Past Human Ecosystems’ (ANTHEA) 2020–2025’. Her research engages with a range of archaeological, social anthropological and philosophical debates pertaining to spatial ontology and deep time trajectories, land tenure changes, disturbance ecologies, spatial perception, and the becoming of biosocial entanglements.
1 Ebooks tarafından Mette Løvschal
Stijn Arnoldussen & Robert Johnston: Europe’s Early Fieldscapes
This volume focuses on the development of field systems through time and space and in their wider landscape context, including classical issues pertaining to past land use and management regimes, inc …
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€139.09