4th October 2011, 01:12 PM
Yep. We already have an independently measurable time frame called calendar years. No need to stick to old categories of time that are badly defined, arbitrary and non-linear.
The Romano-British is not a sensible time period, the term refers to an idea of a 'people'.
Also the inherent errors of the different dating techniques need to be taken into account in any archaeological discussion. The wise use such imprecise terms as early 1st millennium BC etc for a reason. They are being accurate.
Terms like mesolithic, neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman etc etc, create boundaries that weren't there...and also are behind artificial 'gaps' in the archaeological record that some love to theorise as an absence.
The Romano-British is not a sensible time period, the term refers to an idea of a 'people'.
Also the inherent errors of the different dating techniques need to be taken into account in any archaeological discussion. The wise use such imprecise terms as early 1st millennium BC etc for a reason. They are being accurate.
Terms like mesolithic, neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman etc etc, create boundaries that weren't there...and also are behind artificial 'gaps' in the archaeological record that some love to theorise as an absence.