Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Fleming, Andrew
2006.
What Landscape Means to Me.
Landscapes,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 1,
p.
122.
Coningham, Robin
Gunawardhana, Prishanta
Manuel, Mark
Adikari, Gamini
Katugampola, Mangala
Young, Ruth
Schmidt, Armin
Krishnan, K.
Simpson, Ian
McDonnell, Gerry
and
Batt, Cathy
2007.
The state of theocracy: defining an early medieval hinterland in Sri Lanka.
Antiquity,
Vol. 81,
Issue. 313,
p.
699.
Fleming, Andrew
2007.
Don't Bin Your Boots!.
Landscapes,
Vol. 8,
Issue. 1,
p.
85.
Johnson, Matthew
2007.
Don't Bin Your Brain!.
Landscapes,
Vol. 8,
Issue. 2,
p.
126.
Liddiard, Robert
and
Williamson, Tom
2008.
There by Design? Some Reflections on Medieval Elite Landscapes.
Archaeological Journal,
Vol. 165,
Issue. 1,
p.
520.
Finch, Jonathan
2008.
Three Men in a Boat: Biographies and Narrative in the Historic Landscape.
Landscape Research,
Vol. 33,
Issue. 5,
p.
511.
Kowalewski, Stephen A.
2008.
Regional Settlement Pattern Studies.
Journal of Archaeological Research,
Vol. 16,
Issue. 3,
p.
225.
Sims, Lionel
2009.
Entering, and returning from, the underworld: reconstituting Silbury Hill by combining a quantified landscape phenomenology with archaeoastronomy.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute,
Vol. 15,
Issue. 2,
p.
386.
Pollard, Joshua
2009.
The materialization of religious structures in the time of stonehenge.
Material Religion,
Vol. 5,
Issue. 3,
p.
332.
Beck, Jess
and
Chrisomalis, Stephen
2009.
Landscape Archaeology, Paganism, and the Interpretation of Megaliths.
Pomegranate,
Vol. 10,
Issue. 2,
p.
142.
Barrett, John C.
and
Ko, Ilhong
2009.
A phenomenology of landscape.
Journal of Social Archaeology,
Vol. 9,
Issue. 3,
p.
275.
Jusseret, Simon
2010.
Socializing geoarchaeology: Insights from Bourdieu's theory of practice applied to Neolithic and Bronze Age Crete.
Geoarchaeology,
Vol. 25,
Issue. 6,
p.
675.
Bowden, Mark
and
McOmish, David
2011.
A British Tradition? Mapping the Archaeological Landscape.
Landscapes,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
20.
Smith, Michael E.
2011.
Empirical Urban Theory for Archaeologists.
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory,
Vol. 18,
Issue. 3,
p.
167.
Ruggles, Clive L. N.
2011.
Pushing back the frontiers or still running around the same circles? ‘Interpretative archaeoastronomy’ thirty years on.
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union,
Vol. 7,
Issue. S278,
p.
1.
Boutsikas, Efrosyni
and
Ruggles, Clive
2011.
Temples, Stars, and Ritual Landscapes: The Potential for Archaeoastronomy in Ancient Greece.
American Journal of Archaeology,
Vol. 115,
Issue. 1,
p.
55.
JOHNSON, MATTHEW H.
2011.
On the nature of empiricism in archaeology.
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute,
Vol. 17,
Issue. 4,
p.
764.
Graves McEwan, Dorothy
2012.
Qualitative Landscape Theories and Archaeological Predictive Modelling—A Journey Through No Man’s Land?.
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 4,
p.
526.
Hudson, Mark J.
Aoyama, Mami
Hoover, Kara C.
Kawashima, Takamune
and
Uchiyama, Junzo
2012.
Archaeological research and current global climate change : Building archaeological strategies for increasing the resilience of social-ecological systems.
The Quaternary Research (Daiyonki-Kenkyu),
Vol. 51,
Issue. 4,
p.
267.
Mileson, Stephen
2012.
The South Oxfordshire Project: perceptions of landscape, settlement and society,c. 500–1650.
Landscape History,
Vol. 33,
Issue. 2,
p.
83.