Jackson, Mark Historiographical and methodological implications for understanding gaps : a case study in preparing for the Apalirou Environs Project, Naxos 2020 - Herom rivista
Jackson, Mark Historiographical and methodological implications for understanding gaps : a case study in preparing for the Apalirou Environs Project, Naxos 2020 - Herom rivista P. 261-290 Is part of Herom : Journal on Hellenistic and Roman Material Culture : 9, 2020 Workspace Quote Information DOI: 10.1400/280260 ISSN: 2294-4281 Permalink: http://digital.casalini.it/10.1400/280260 In this issue Santa Venera al Pozzo (Statio Acium) : un progetto di ricerca multidisciplinare tra cultura materiale, produzioni, economie Exploring the unfamiliar : publishing pottery data in a linked Environment Signacula decorativi per i manufatti in sigillata africana : alcune considerazioni tra evidenza archeologica e sperimentazione From the Atlantic to the Cayster : the consumption of fish and sea products in Ephesos La conservazione delle derrate. Nuove metodologie di indagine applicate allo studio di due magazzini di età imperiale (I-III d.C.) nelle città di Thamusida e Banasa (Mauretania Tingitana, marocco) Minding gaps in the archaeological record Historiographical and methodological implications for understanding gaps : a case study in preparing for the Apalirou Environs Project, Naxos Bridging the Early Medieval ceramic gap in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean (7th-9th c.) : local and global phenomena Rediscovering the Late Hellenistic-Early Roman Peloponnese : Analyzing transitional ceramic assemblages found on archaeological survey Spring forward : two examples of how shifting chronologies can postpone the Dark Ages Gaps or transitions? : North Syrian/South Anatolian ceramics in the Early, Middle, and Late Islamic Periods Correcting and connecting gaps on the Atlantic Seaboard : the ceramic evidence for contact and exchange between 4th and 8th centuries AD. In search of lost centuries : Hand-made pottery in Cyprus between Rome and the Crusaders Medieval handmade wares in southwest Anatolia : the paradigm of Xanthos Abstracts Editorial Guidelines