Abstract
This review calls for the definition of a landscape approach in archaeology. After tracing the development of the landscape idea over its history in the social sciences and examining the compatibility between this concept and traditional archaeological practice, we suggest that archaeology is particularly well suited among the social sciences for defining and applying a landscape approach. If archaeologists are to use the landscape paradigm as a “pattern which connects” human behavior with particular places and times, however, we need a common terminology and methodology to build a construct paradigm. We suggest that settlement ecology, ritual landscapes, and ethnic landscapes will contribute toward the definition of such a broadly encompassing paradigm that also will facilitate dialogue between archaeologists and traditional communities.
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Anschuetz, K.F., Wilshusen, R.H. & Scheick, C.L. An Archaeology of Landscapes: Perspectives and Directions. Journal of Archaeological Research 9, 157–211 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1016621326415
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1016621326415