The dartmoor reaves. Investigating Prehistoric Land Divisions
(2008)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Windgather Press, 2008
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781911188728 (electronic bk.) MWT13439909, 1911188720 (electronic bk.) 13439909
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

First published in 1988, The Dartmoor Reaves is a classic story of archaeological fieldwork and discovery, and a winner of the Archaeological Book Award. This major new edition adds both color illustrations and two substantial new chapters to the original groundbreaking text, which revolutionized our understanding of Britain's prehistoric landscapes. Dartmoor has long been known for the richness of its prehistoric heritage; stone circles, hut circles, massive burial cairns, and stone rows all pepper the landscape. In the 1970s a new dimension was added, with the recognition that the long-ignored reaves (ruined walls) are also prehistoric; Dartmoor now posed all sorts of questions about the nature of Bronze Age society. Andrew Fleming describes the critical moment when his own fieldwork picked up the pattern of the reaves, and he realized their true identity. His new chapters place Dartmoor's large-scale, planned, prehistoric landscapes in the context of other 'co-axial' field systems that have since been found elsewhere, and also discuss their meaning, in the light of the latest research on the Bronze Age

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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