From inside the bookTry this search over all volumes: tion What people are saying - Write a reviewReview: A Phenomenology of Landscape: Places, Paths and MonumentsUser Review - Elizabeth Tangora - GoodreadsOne of the most important, founding works of phenomenology, and an absolute must-read for anyone interested in British archaeology. Read full review Related books
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Common terms and phrasesAboriginal aligned ancestral powers archaeological areas associated axes Barrett barrow on Gussage barrows on Cranborne becomes Black Mountains bones Bottlebush boundaries Bradley Caldey island Carn Ingli causewayed enclosures centre chalk chambered cairn chambers coast coastal constituted construction Cranborne Chase created cultural Cursus banks deposits distance distribution ditch dominant Dorset Cursus early Neolithic enclosure escarpment edge excavations Ffostyll flint scatters Gussage Cow Gwernvale Hambledon Hill human hunter-gatherers intervisible Koyukon land landscape later Mesolithic linked located long axis long barrows long cairns Mbuti meanings ment Mesolithic locales Mesolithic sites microlith monu monuments Morfa Bychan mound Mynydd Troed myth mythological natural northern barrow orientation Pembrokeshire Penbury Knoll Pentre Ifan perception relation relationship ridge ritual rock outcrops sacred Salisbury Plantation scape SE-NW significance situated slope social south-west Wales southern space spatial spur stone symbolic Tewa tion topography visible visual Yolngu References to this bookFrom other books
From Google ScholarThe Powers of Rocks: Topography and Monument Construction on ...Christopher Tilley - 1996 - World Archaeology Open spaces and dwelling places: being at home on hill farms in ...John Gray - 1999 - American Ethnologist Bibliographic information |