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EuroREA 3/2006

EuroREA 3/2006 © EXREA / EXARC, 2006
Size: A4, 100 pages
Price excluding postage: € 8.00

In the third issue a.o.:

Dioramas, (re)constructions and Experimental Archaeology
DISCUSSION - Lara Comis (Italy)

Pots and drums: an acoustic study of Neolithic pottery drums
STUDIES - Lynda Aiano (United Kingdom)

Experimental Roman Minting
STUDIES - Di Hu (USA)

Implications of crushed pottery in prehistoric pottery
ITEMS - Martin Hložek, Radomír Tichý, Hana Dohnálková, Iva Dohnálková (Czech Republic) 


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Please find below the articles from this issue, which we made available on line.
Our goal is to add more articles.
Please consider, articles published the past 2 years, are access only (and visible in the list below) to EXARC Members. Please Become a Member in order to view them.
 

Archaeological Open-Air Museum

To Reconstruct a Sacrificial Site

Egil Josefson,
Jan Olofsson (SE)

Aspects of the Iron Age Sacrificial Site at Eketorp Fort, Sweden. The article discusses the example of a reconstruction of an Iron Age sacrificial place in Eketorp as well as the limits to what can be reconstructed in a Living History Museum...

Experimental Archaeology

Conference: It has been almost 20 years, but it is still relevant

The session was initiated by professor H.T. Waterbolk from Groningen, Netherlands and professor O. Olsen from Copenhagen, Denmark. This workshop took place in Århus, Denmark with 31 specialists from 13 countries attending. The 1980s was the beginning of a boom in the construction of archaeologically inspired buildings inside and outside archaeological open air centres...

Ancient wood, woodworking and wooden houses

J. M. Coles (UK)

It has been almost 20 years, but it is still relevant
The 1980s was the beginning of a boom in the construction of archaeologically inspired buildings inside and outside archaeological open-air museums.
*** This article introduces a record on the management and use of prehistoric woodland gained from the research of the Somerset Levels...

The scientific basis for the reconstruction of prehistoric and protohistoric houses

Peter J. Reynolds (UK)

It has been almost 20 years, but it is still relevant
The 1980s was the beginning of a boom in the construction of archaeologically inspired buildings inside and outside archaeological open-air museums.
*** The purpose of this paper was to explore the scientific basis of building reconstructions...

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