[AK Geoarchäologie] Alles Gute im Neuen Jahr!

Christian Stolz Christian.Stolz at uni-flensburg.de
Mi Jan 3 09:47:17 CET 2018


Liebe Mitglieder des AK Geoarchäologie,

Christopher Miller und ich wünschen Ihnen alles Gute im Neuen Jahr, Glück, Gesundheit und Erfolg!
Von unserem Buchprojekt kann ich mitteilen, dass sich bereits erfreulich viele Arbeitsgruppen und Kollegen bei uns gemeldet haben. Wir sind weiterhin offen für Beitragsvorschläge! Sie sollten bis möglichst Ende Januar eingegangen sein. Eine E-Mail genügt.

Heute erhalten Sie außerdem eine Ankündigung des Kollegen Stefan Dreibrodt aus Kiel bezüglich der EGU-Session „Geoarchaeology of Bronze Age Europe“ (s.u.).

Beste Grüße
Christian Stolz


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PD Dr. Christian Stolz
Akademischer Rat
Sprecher des Deutschen Arbeitskreises für Geoarchäologie (http://www.akgeoarchaeologie.de)

Europa-Universität Flensburg, Physische Geographie, Abteilung Biologie und ihre Didaktik
Auf dem Campus 1, D-24943 Flensburg (Raum OSL 484)
Tel.: +49-461-805-2339, Fax: +49-461-805-952339
ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Christian_Stolz
Sprechstunde für Studierende: Mittwochs, 10-11 Uhr




European Association of Archaeologists, Conference in Barcelona, 05.-08. September 2018

Session: #557

Title:

GEOARCHAEOLOGY OF BRONZE AGE EUROPE

Content:

The European Bronze Age is regarded as a period of pre-modern 'globalisation', marking a significant change from the interconnectivity in the Neolithic. Mobility and migrations played a fundamental role in shaping the European Bronze Age, with circulation of people, artefacts, and raw materials (metals, amber, wool) along north-south and east-west axes. This session aims to bring together geoarchaeologists and landscape archaeologists working on Bronze Age contexts from different parts of Europe to highlight similarities and differences observable at different scales of geoarchaeological research. The following themes will be deal with:

(a) At the micro- or intra site-scale, the application of geoarchaeological methods to specific archaeological features, such as floors, rubbish pits and middens, combustion features, earth-based construction materials, activity areas, etc.

(b) At the site scale, the geoarchaeology of all types of Bronze age sites (e.g., pile dwellings in lacustrine or floodplain settings, sites enclosed by ditches and ramparts, tells), on their distribution patterns and on the landscape modifications they brought about.

(c) At the landscape, regional or supra-regional scale, the challenge to integrate archaeological interpretations with documented palaeo-environmental trends to construct a robust diachronic understanding of landscape development. This new understanding will perhaps enable the detection of processes or triggers (i.e. natural triggers such as climate; human triggers such as societal developments, trade, exchange, pests) driving these key developments.

One additional aim is to allow for the presentation and discussion of records from European sites that are not published in English and therefore failed to reach the larger audience.

Main organiser:

PhD CRISTIANO NICOSIA (Belgium) 1

Co-organisers:

Prof Gianna Ayala (United Kingdom) 2
Dr. Stefan Dreibrodt (Germany) 3
Dr Jakub Niebieszczański (Poland) 4
Prof Ákos Pető (Hungary) 5

Affiliations:

  1.  Università di Padova, Italy
2. University of Sheffield
3. Institute for Ecosystem Research/CRC1266, University of Kiel
4. Laboratory of Mediterranean Bronze Age Archaeology, Institute of Archaeology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznam
5. Institute of Nature Conservation and Landscape Management, Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Szent István University


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PD Dr. rer. nat. habil. Stefan Dreibrodt
Institute for Ecosystem Research
Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel



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