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Neolithic Settlement in Ireland and Western Britainedited by Ian Armit, Eileen Murphy, Eiméar Nelis and Derek SimpsonThe past few years have seen an upsurge in the numbers of known Neolithic settlements in Ireland. Many of these sites have been excavated by archaeologists based in field units, but few are well-known to the wider archaeological community. This papers in this volume were presented at a conference held at Queen's University, Belfast in 2001, which provided a forum for a discussion of the new Neolithic material from Ireland in its wider geographical context. Although the bulk of the emerging Irish settlement evidence relates to substantial houses, many of these papers consider wider themes, including issues of contact and communication along the sea routes and coastal margins of north-west Europe, questions of diversity and regional patterns of sedentism and mobility, and variations in regional food production strategies. The volume includes twenty-six papers representing a series of studies ranging geographically from Orkney to the French Atlantic facade. Contents: Introduction (Ian Armit, Eileen Murphy, Eiméar Nelis and Derek Simpson); French Connections I: Spreading the marmites thinly (Alison Sheridan); French Connections II: Of cows and men (Anne Tresset); Contemplating some awful(ly interesting) vistas: Importing cattle and red deer into prehistoric Ireland (Peter Woodman and Margaret McCarthy); Terminology, time and space: Labels, radiocarbon chronologies and a 'Neolithic' of small worlds (Patrick Ashmore); Rooted or routed? Landscapes of Neolithic settlement in Ireland (Gabriel Cooney); The early farming settlement of south western England in the Neolithic (Roger Mercer); Neolithic settlement in the lowlands of Scotland: A preliminary survey (Gordon Barclay); Once upon a time Skara Brae was unique (David Clarke); The Drowners: Permanence and transience in the Hebridean Neolithic (Ian Armit); Neolithic Northton: A review of the evidence (Eileen Murphy and Derek Simpson); Billown and the Neolithic of the Isle of Man (Timothy Darvill); The Early Neolithic and the Manx environment (Peter J Davey and Jim B Innes); Rheast Buigh, Patrick: Middle Neolithic exploitation of the Manx uplands? (Peter J Davey and Jenny Woodcock); What do we mean by Neolithic settlement? Some approaches, 10 years on (Alex Gibson). The Irish 'house boom'. Irish Neolithic houses (Ian Armit, Eileen Murphy, Eiméar Nelis and Derek Simpson); Excavations at Thornhill, Co. Londonderry (Paul Logue); Neolithic houses in Ballyharry townland, Islandmagee, Co. Antrim (Dermot G Moore); Neolithic structure at Drummenny Lower, Co. Donegal: An environmental perspective (Cathy Dunne); The excavation of a Neolithic house at Enagh townland, Co. Derry (Cormac McSparran); Archaeological excavations of a Neolithic settlement at Coolfore, Co. Louth (Cóilín O Drisceoil); A Neolithic house in Cloghers, Co. Kerry (Jacinta Kiely); Neolithic beginnings on Roughan Hill and the Burren (Carleton Jones). Irish Neolithic settlement architecture: A reappraisal (Sarah Cross); Donegore and Lyles Hill, Neolithic enclosed sites in Co. Antrim: The lithic assemblages (Eiméar Nelis); Neolithic expectations (Richard Bradley). 244p, 116 b/w figures, 13 tables, (Oxbow Books 2003) Review Quotes"so useful that it needs to be brought to the widest possible attention." Current Archaeology 191 (XVI: 11) (2004) "deserves a place on the shelves of all those interested in prehistory." Sylvia Desmond "This volume will be widely used and quoted." Alasdair Whittle "excellent" Frances Healy Table of ContentsIntroduction (Ian Armit, Eileen Murphy, Eiméar Nelis and Derek Simpson) Related Titles
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