Apologies to those not going to ICAZ (but you might be interested in Reconsidering Deposition)
I have checked with Archaeopress, the publishers of British Archaeological Reports (BARs), and they will be taking stock to sell at the ICAZ conference in Paris in August.
BAR have/will be publishing some of the volumes resulting from the 2006 ICAZ conference in Mexico City.
I assume that we will get the usual conference discount at the book stalls, so make sure you have spare space or weight allowance in your luggage...
Sorry that I don't have a list of what might be available. I checked with Archaeopress because I wanted to know whether I should wait for ICAZ or go ahead and purchase at full price a copy of Jim Morris and Mark Maltby's book:
BAR S2077 2010: Integrating Social and Environmental Archaeologies; Reconsidering Deposition edited by James Morris and Mark Maltby. ISBN 9781407306384. £31.00. v+118 pages; illustrated throughout with maps, plans, figures, drawings and photographs.
This volume is a collection of papers presented at the Association of Environmental Archaeologists conference in Exeter, 2006. The nine papers within this volume consider how social archaeological questions can be investigated utilising environmental remains. Contents: 1) Introduction: Integrating social and Environmental Archaeologies (James Morris and Mark Maltby); 2) The use of archaeological and zooarchaeological data in the interpretation of Dún Ailinne, an Iron Age royal site in Co. Kildare, Ireland (Pam Crabtree, Susan Johnston and Douglas Campana); 3) Associated bone groups: beyond the Iron Age (James Morris); 4) Pits and wells (Mark Maltby); 5) New light on an old rite: reanalysis of an Iron Age burial group from Blewburton Hill, Oxfordshire (Robin Bendrey, Stephany Leach and Kate Clark); 6) Structured Deposition or Casual Disposal of Human Remains? A Case Study of Four Iron Age Sites from southern England (Anna Russell); 7) Bone modification and the conceptual relationship between humans and animals in Iron Age Wessex (Richard Madgwick); 8) More ritual rubbish? Exploring the taphonomic history, context formation processes and ‘specialness’ of deposits including human and animal bone in Iron Age pits (Clare Randall); 9) The politics of the everyday: exploring ‘midden’ space in Late Bronze Age Wiltshire (Kate Waddington).
Sue
Dr Sue Stallibrass direct phone: 0151 794 5046
English Heritage Archaeological Science Adviser for North West England
Department of Archaeology, SACE,
Hartley Building, Brownlow street,
University of Liverpool
LIVERPOOL
L69 3GS
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