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I. The Evolution of the Landscape
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
Extract
The Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London has set up a sub-committee to encourage co-ordinated research aimed at deciphering the organization of the landscape from the earliest times to the recent past. After a detailed consideration of the evidence, it decided to concentrate its attention, in the first instance, on the chalk lands of central southern England, where the spread of detectable remains is denser and more widespread than anywhere else in the country, and where the archaeological material in the form of artefacts and faunal remains is best preserved in the greatest quantity.
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1973
References
page 10 note 1 Wilts. Arch. Mag. lxii (1967), 16–33.Google Scholar
page 10 note 2 Crawford, O. G. S., Air Survey and Archaeology (1924) (O.S. Professional Paper 7), especially end-map ‘Celtic fields of Central Hampshire’. We have not here attempted to revise, but only to annotate, Crawford's plan.Google Scholar
page 12 note 1 Cunliffe, B., ‘Danebury, Hampshire: First Interim Report on the Excavation 1969–70’, Antiq. Journ. li (1971), 240–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 12 note 2 To be published in detail in the second part of this volume of the Journal.
page 12 note 3 Cunliffe, B., ‘Saxon and Medieval Settlement Patterns at Chalton, Hampshire’, Med.Arch (1973), (forthcoming).Google Scholar
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