15th February 2009, 12:56 PM
To answer Peter's specific point:
I regard archaeology as the study of past society through the evidence of its remains, regardless of the time frame of that society. These remains are essentially "material culture", but that would include landscapes and buildings as well as artefacts and ecofacts.
Personally I regard yesterday as archaeology just as much as the Iron Age. Have a look at some of the Change and Creation work being done by EH, or John Schofield's recently widely reported archaeological study of the Greenham Common Peace Camps. But then I am speaking as someone whose old transit van was the subject of an archaeological excavation!
In short, I don't have a cut-off date.
Quote:quote:So I ask Paul to tell us what date he things [sic] things should be no longer regarded as archaeological?
I regard archaeology as the study of past society through the evidence of its remains, regardless of the time frame of that society. These remains are essentially "material culture", but that would include landscapes and buildings as well as artefacts and ecofacts.
Personally I regard yesterday as archaeology just as much as the Iron Age. Have a look at some of the Change and Creation work being done by EH, or John Schofield's recently widely reported archaeological study of the Greenham Common Peace Camps. But then I am speaking as someone whose old transit van was the subject of an archaeological excavation!
In short, I don't have a cut-off date.