Russell's (2011) Social Zooarchaeology is chock-full of ideas. It is a
thorough account of all of the ways humans and animals interact and how
those relationships can be recognized in the archaeological record.
Good luck!
Deborah
--------------------
> Dear all
>
> My colleagues and I are looking for examples of the use of archaeozoology
> data/knowledge - projects that move beyond subsistence, species lists and
> which animals were hunted, trapped, kept and served for dinner. Examples
> that show the interdisciplinary nature of our discipline and those that
> push the boundaries. Old and new (or a combination) methodologies are
> welcome. What are the globally relevant research directions
> archaeozoologists are/should be pursuing?
>
> Please be so kind as to share with us your thoughts, favorites and the
> prime examples in the discipline. If you have the references (or
> articles) to share that would be great.
>
> Looking forward to the inspiration to come.
>
> Greetings
>
> Karin, Annie and Evin
>
> Normal0falsefalsefalseEN-GBX-NONEHE
>
--
Dr. Deborah Ruscillo Cosmopoulos
Department of Anthropology
Washington University in St. Louis
Campus Box 1114
St. Louis, MO 63130
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