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Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 3, 43–57. Piggott, C. M. (1938). A Middle Bronze Age barrow and Deverel-Rimbury urnfield at Latch Farm, Christchurch, Hampshire. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 4, 169–187. Piggott, C. M. (1943). Excavation of fifteen barrows in the New Forest, 1941–2. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 9 ...
The Prehistoric Society is a British learned society devoted to the study of the human past from the earliest times until the emergence of written history.. Now based at University College London in the United Kingdom, it was founded by V. Gordon Childe, Stuart Piggott and Grahame Clark in 1935 [1] but also traces its founding to the earlier Prehistoric Society of East Anglia [2] which began ...
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 63: 147–178. ... ISBN 978-1-911307-43-3. Available as an open access download from UCL Press. Tilley, Christopher (2019).
Although Rankine argued that they should produce a lengthy report, Clark only wrote up the results for a 1939 article in the Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. [47] In February 1935, Clark had suggested that the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia rename itself as the Prehistoric Society, thus stretching its remit far beyond East Anglia.
Woodman was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1982. [1] He was awarded the Europa Prize by the Prehistoric Society in 2009, recognising outstanding contributions to the study of European prehistory. [8] In the same year, the Prehistoric Society organised a conference and published a festschrift in his honour. [9]
David Philip Spencer Peacock (14 January 1939 – 15 March 2015) was a British archaeologist. Educated at Stamford School and at the University of St Andrews, he spent most of his career at the University of Southampton, where he specialised in the scientific study of Roman pottery.
In his "The Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society vol.25 (1959), pp. 260–69", archaeologist Charles McBurney notes that "In the Post Glacial period the cave was much used by Mesolithic hunters"; a conclusion confirmed by John Campbell's excavation of 1977. [45] [46]
John Parkington FRSSAf is an Emeritus professor in archaeology and hunter-gatherers, Paleoenvironmental reconstruction and human ecology, prehistoric art, and coastal archaeology. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He has suggested that since fish provide an important nutrient for the brain, the consumption of fish led to the emergence of the first really intelligent ...