banner

Surface collection, sampling, and research design : a retrospective.

Por: Redman, Charles LTipo de material: ArtículoArtículoIdioma: Inglés Series American Antiquity ; v. 52, No. 2Detalles de publicación: Washington : Society for American Archaeology, 1987Descripción: pp.249-265 : il. ; 28 cmTema(s): ARQUEOLOGIA | EXCAVACIONES | INVESTIGACIONES ARQUEOLOGICAS | ARIZONA | VALLE DE MORROClasificación CDD: 930.1
Contenidos:
Contenido: The good, the bad, and the Misunderstood -- Examples of alternative field strategies -- Shoofly Village -- El Morro Valley -- Qsar es-Seghir -- General issues of concern in designing field investigations -- Define interpretive goals -- Specify minimal data requirements -- Understand the problems of data recognition -- Structure the flow of research and evaluation -- Choose appropriate tools for each stage of research -- Maintain cost effectiveness -- The personal element.
Resumen: Probability sampling, controlled surface collecting, and explicit research designs are standard working procedures for a large portion of the archaeological profession. The need for adopting these approaches and their utility in the field have been persuasively argued in the literature for 20 years. Despite their agreed-upon utility, these approaches are often poorly understood. Fiel strategies of four projets and their rationales are presented to provide examples of specific approaches that have had positive results. Based on these case studies and a review of the literature. I propose six basic principles as guides to the formulation of future field strategies. The researcher must define interpretive objectives, specify minimal data requirements, understand the problems of data recognition, structure the flow of research and evaluation, choose appropiate tools for each stage of research, and maintain cost effectiveness.
Etiquetas de esta biblioteca: No hay etiquetas de esta biblioteca para este título. Ingresar para agregar etiquetas.
    Valoración media: 0.0 (0 votos)
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura Copia número Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
CDE CDE Museo Nacional de Etnografía y Folklore
Revistas CDE-4275 1 ejm. Disponible MUSEFCDE004392

Impreso.

Contenido: The good, the bad, and the Misunderstood -- Examples of alternative field strategies -- Shoofly Village -- El Morro Valley -- Qsar es-Seghir -- General issues of concern in designing field investigations -- Define interpretive goals -- Specify minimal data requirements -- Understand the problems of data recognition -- Structure the flow of research and evaluation -- Choose appropriate tools for each stage of research -- Maintain cost effectiveness -- The personal element.

Probability sampling, controlled surface collecting, and explicit research designs are standard working procedures for a large portion of the archaeological profession. The need for adopting these approaches and their utility in the field have been persuasively argued in the literature for 20 years. Despite their agreed-upon utility, these approaches are often poorly understood. Fiel strategies of four projets and their rationales are presented to provide examples of specific approaches that have had positive results. Based on these case studies and a review of the literature. I propose six basic principles as guides to the formulation of future field strategies. The researcher must define interpretive objectives, specify minimal data requirements, understand the problems of data recognition, structure the flow of research and evaluation, choose appropiate tools for each stage of research, and maintain cost effectiveness.

Ingles.

No hay comentarios en este titulo.

para colocar un comentario.

MUSEO NACIONAL DE ETNOGRAFÍA Y FOLKLORE        
La Paz N° 916 Calle Ingavi (591-2) 2408640- 2406030 Fax (591-2) 2406642
E-mail: [email protected]   Casilla postal 5817   www.musef.org.bo
Sucre 74 calle España (591-4) 6455293
Pie de página
© Copyright 2024 · MUSEF