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Andrew Womack Yitzchak Jaffe Jing Zhou Ling-yu Hung Hui Wang Shuicheng Li 《Journal of Field Archaeology》2017,42(6):488-502
Recent work at the Qijia Culture type-site of Qijiaping in the Tao River valley of Gansu Province, China, has shed light on the complex nature of this early Bronze Age site. Situated at the intersection between the mixed pastoralists of eastern central Asia and the agriculturalists of China’s northern Central Plain, Qijia peoples absorbed, evolved, and transmitted products and technologies that shaped cultural developments in both directions. The Tao River Archaeological Project (TRAP) used a combination of surface survey, geophysics, digital mapping, and targeted excavation to expand our understanding of the multicomponent nature of Qijiaping. This included identifying potential habitation, mortuary, and production locales; examining site-wide ceramic use; mapping anomalies through geophysics; and further exploring these through targeted excavations. The results have expanded our knowledge of the site structure of Qijiaping and its place in the wider Qijia interaction sphere, while also confirming the usefulness of this methodology. 相似文献
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Public engagement is becoming increasingly common practice in archaeological projects, capitalizing on the interactions of field archaeologists with local communities as well as with the descendants of the people under study, in a variety of ways: from the use of social media to engaging the local public with onsite presentations and exhibitions. However, public engagement efforts are often less robust when archaeologists return to their home institutions, with most of the researchers’ time and energies spent fulfilling their academic duties. Interactions between archaeologists and their local communities — those closer to their home institutions — are often minimal, creating insular university departments. To secure a future as a vibrant, relevant field of research, archaeology must develop greater interest and skill in engaging with its neighbours both within and outside the academy. The study of past meals and foodways provides an exceptional avenue for public outreach, which in turn is further enhanced through fruitful collaboration among various university departments and museums. Here we present the results of the multidisciplinary outreach project ‘Eating Archaeology’, designed with the intention of building collaborations across disciplines and a new narrative with which to engage the public. 相似文献
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Jaffe Yitzchak Hein Anke Womack Andrew Brunson Katherine d’Alpoim Guedes Jade Guo Rongzhen Zhou Jing Ko Jada Wu Xiaohong Wang Hui Li Shuicheng Flad Rowan 《Journal of World Prehistory》2021,34(4):595-647
Journal of World Prehistory - The Xindian culture of northwest China has been seen as a prototypical example of a transition toward pastoralism, resulting in part from environmental changes that... 相似文献
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Campbell Roderick Jaffe Yitzchak Kim Christopher Sturm Camilla Jaang Li 《Journal of Archaeological Research》2022,30(1):69-116
Journal of Archaeological Research - In this article we argue that several of the dominant narratives concerning the political economy of the Chinese Bronze Age are in need of major revision,... 相似文献
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