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Alasdair Whittle, Frances Healy and Alex Bayliss. Gathering Time: Dating the Early Neolithic Enclosures of Southern Britain and Ireland (Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2011, 2 vols., 992pp., over 600 illustrations, 103 tables, hbk, ISBN 978-1-84217-425-8)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Niels H. Andersen*
Affiliation:
Moesgaard Museum, Denmark (Translation by David Earle Robinson and Anne Bloch)

Abstract

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Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © European Association of Archaeologists 2014 

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References

Andersen, N.H. 1997. Sarup Volume 1: The Sarup Enclosures: The Funnel Beaker Culture of the Sarup Site Including Two Causewayed Camps Compared to the Contemporary Settlements in the Area and other European Enclosures. Jutland Archaeological Society Publications 33.1. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press.Google Scholar
Bell, M., Fowler, P.J. & Hillson, S.W. eds. 1996. The Experimental Earthwork Project 1960–1992. Council for British Archaeology Research Report 1000. York: Council for British Archaeology.Google Scholar
McKinley, J. 2008. Human Remains and Diet. In: Mercer, R. & Healy, F., eds. Hambledon Hill, Dorset, England: Excavation and Survey of a Neolithic Monument Complex and its Surrounding Landscape. Swindon: English Heritage, pp. 477535.Google Scholar
Smith, I.F., 1967. Windmill Hill and its Implications. In: Walterbolk, H.T. ed. Neolithic Studies in Atlantic Europe. Proceedings of the 2nd Atlantic Colloquium, Groningen, 1964. Palaehistoria, 12: 469–81.Google Scholar
Whittle, A., Pollard, J. & Grigson, C. 1999. The Harmony of Symbols: The Windmill Hill Causewayed Enclosure, Wiltshire. Oxford: Oxbow.CrossRefGoogle Scholar