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Offering publication
flexibility
E-Publishing is an
area that we are progressively moving into for the more specialist
reports, however, we are able to also offer, for the some of the
titles that we published high-quality print-on-demand paper copies.
This therefore gives the end-user the flexibility of how they wish
to purchase the publication. Please note this area is going to
rapidly expand within the next few months. As you can see we are
also going to provide a directory of other e-publications available
from other websites.
We are also now offering some of our
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If you would
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contact us.

- Research, Planning and Management:
The East of England Archaeological Research Framework Review
Introduction, by Nigel
Brown, Mike Burchell, Anthea Case and Adrian Olivier
Coastal archaeology: managing the resource, by Peter Murphy
Maritime archaeology in the East of England, by Ian Oxley
Cropmarks in Constable Country: research and management in the Stour
Valley, by Nigel Brown and Helen Saunders
Historic landscape characterisation in the east of England, by
Lynn Dyson-Bruce and Dave Went
Figure 1,
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4,
Figure 5
Sweet Uneventful Countryside: excavated medieval farms and their
landscape in Essex, by Maria Medlycott
Trajectory: an historic moment for our towns, by Brian Durham
Norfolk Online Access to Cultural and Historic Environment
Resources, by David Gurney
Bronze Age farms
and Iron Age farm mounds of the Outer Hebrides by J. Barber,
Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports. (SAIR 3)
The Excavation of
Four Caves in the Geodha Smoo near Durness, Sutherland by
T. Pollard,
Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports (SAIR 18) - JUST
PUBLISHED
Articles from 'The Archaeology of Sussex to AD 2000: edited by D.
Rudling
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Recording and Interpreting
the Churchyards of Lewes, Sussex. pp 217-226 - The Archaeology
of Sussex to AD 2000 - edited D. Rudling, Heritage Marketing and
Publications 2003 (high resolution print download)
Summary -
This paper covers the recent
churchyard recording programme carried out by the East Sussex
Archaeology and Museums Project in Lewes. It is intended to give
an overview of the fieldwork, its methods and results. A central
part of the paper is a discussion of the research implications of
this work and what it can tell us about the beliefs of the
communities who erected the monuments. This is achieved through a
series of case studies. One particular area of research, the study
of the significance of the symbolism manifested by 18th century
monuments, is considered in detail. Future areas of research are
indicated.
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The Earliest Occupation of
Sussex: Recent Research and Future Objectives. pp 17-28 - The
Archaeology of Sussex to AD 2000 - edited D. Rudling, Heritage
Marketing and Publications 2003 (low resolution screen download)
Summary - The past 20 years
has seen Sussex transformed from a backwater of the British
Palaeolithic to an area of regional and global significance. This
is the result of recent University College London led research
programmes aimed at the investigation of the geology and
archaeology of the Sussex Coastal Plain. Analysis of raised beach
deposits, terrestrial land-surfaces and periglacial gravels has
indicated that they may preserve a record of climatic and
environmental change over the past 500,000 years. Excavation of
the oldest of these deposits has revealed large areas of intact
Pleistocene land-surface preserving the traces of hominid tool
production, butchery activity and a wide range of palaeo-environmental
data. Amongst the faunal finds were those of extinct mammals
including a hominid species. Outside of the Coastal Plain, only
seven new artefacts have been recovered during this time. Future
research must aim to build on these recent advances to improve our
understanding of Pleistocene deposits in Sussex river valleys and
archaeological material from the Downlands.
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