Literatura científica selecionada sobre o tema "Network archaeology"

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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Network archaeology"

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Sorset, Irina T., e Amanda M. Evans. "Florida Public Archaeology Network". Historical Archaeology 49, n.º 2 (junho de 2015): 12–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf03377136.

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Navlakha, Saket, e Carl Kingsford. "Network Archaeology: Uncovering Ancient Networks from Present-Day Interactions". PLoS Computational Biology 7, n.º 4 (14 de abril de 2011): e1001119. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1001119.

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Mills, Barbara J. "Social Network Analysis in Archaeology". Annual Review of Anthropology 46, n.º 1 (23 de outubro de 2017): 379–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102116-041423.

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Pitblado, Bonnie L., Delaney Cooley, Bobi Deere, Meghan Dudley, Allison McLeod, Kaylyn Moore e Horvey Palacios. "The Oklahoma Public Archaeology Network (OKPAN)". Advances in Archaeological Practice 11, n.º 3 (agosto de 2023): 314–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aap.2023.9.

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ABSTRACTAs the venues for professional training and education, universities have always shaped the future of the archaeological discipline—for better but also, in important ways, for worse. Historically, university structures promoted practitioner homogeneity and social inequity and, at the largest research-intensive universities, even managed to turn “service” into a dirty word. However, using the same structures that perpetuated damaging practices in the past, universities can just as readily transform archaeology into the inclusive, community-engaged discipline it should always have been—while serving communities in ways that matter to them. This article explains and illustrates how and why we have tried to do this through the founding and operation of the Oklahoma Public Archaeology Network (OKPAN) at the University of Oklahoma. OKPAN seeks to improve relationships among diverse Oklahoma communities by framing archaeology as a tool that that can serve communities’ interests while creating pathways within universities for members of historically excluded groups to join and help further transform the discipline.
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Ojala, Carl-Gösta. "Mapping the North: Ethnicities, Territories and the Networks of Archaeology". Current Swedish Archaeology 14, n.º 1 (10 de junho de 2021): 159–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.37718/csa.2006.08.

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The Saami, the indigenous population of northern Fennoscandia, have constantly been conceptualized as the others in relation to the (pre-)history writing of the modern nation-states. Here, the discussion focuses on Saami archaeology and representations of Saami prehistory in Sweden. It is emphasized that all ethnic, national and territorial concepts are embedded in networks of power, and that the connections and separations behind the concepts need to be explored. In this article a relational network approach is suggested as an alternative to dualistic thinking about ethnicities and territories. Ethnicity is here seen as one set of relationships, interwoven into many networks stretching over time and space. The network approach is in part inspired by actor-network theory, which is briefly described together with some possible points of interest for archaeological studies.
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Brughmans, Tom. "Thinking Through Networks: A Review of Formal Network Methods in Archaeology". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 20, n.º 4 (20 de abril de 2012): 623–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10816-012-9133-8.

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Hodder, Ian, e Angus Mol. "Network Analysis and Entanglement". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 23, n.º 4 (26 de agosto de 2015): 1066–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10816-015-9259-6.

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Brughmans, T. "Networks of networks: a citation network analysis of the adoption, use, and adaptation of formal network techniques in archaeology". Literary and Linguistic Computing 28, n.º 4 (5 de agosto de 2013): 538–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqt048.

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Martin, Toby F. "Casting the Net Wider: Network Approaches to Artefact Variation in Post-Roman Europe". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 27, n.º 4 (11 de janeiro de 2020): 861–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10816-019-09441-x.

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Abstract This paper explores the stylistic variability of fifth- and sixth-century brooches in Europe using network visualisations, suggesting an alternative means of study, which for more than a century has been dominated by typology. It is suggested that network methods and related theories offer alternative conceptual models that encourage original ways of exploring material that has otherwise become canonical. Foremost is the proposal that objects of personal adornment like brooches were a means of competitive display through which individuals mediated social relationships within and beyond their immediate communities, and in so doing formed surprisingly far-flung networks. The potential sizes of these networks varied according to their location in Europe, with particularly large distances of up to 1000 km achieved in Scandinavia and continental Europe. In addition, an overall tendency toward the serial reproduction of particular forms in the mid-sixth century has broader consequences for how we understand the changing nature of social networks in post-Roman Europe.
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Chrzan, Janet. "Archaeology and Anthropology in a Network-Rich World". Anthropology News 47, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2006): 28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/an.2006.47.1.28.

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Teses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Network archaeology"

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Brughmans, Tom. "Evaluating network science in archaeology : a Roman archaeology perspective". Thesis, University of Southampton, 2014. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/371700/.

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Lewandowski, David L. "Shifting north| Social network analysis and the pithouse-to-pueblo transition in the Mogollon Highlands". Thesis, Northern Arizona University, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1595268.

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This study uses Social Network Analysis to examine the changing social networks of the Mogollon Highlands during the pithouse-to-pueblo transition. Social Network Analysis is a set of formal methods used to define and examine ties, or relationships between actors, or in the case of this study, archaeological sites. The pithouse-to-pueblo transition in the Mogollon Highlands occurred around A.D. 1000 and is characterized by the construction of above ground masonry architecture and a prevalence of Cibola White Wares. Prior to the transition to pueblo architecture, populations in the Mogollon Highlands lived in pithouses and Mimbres White Wares dominated the decorated ceramic assemblages of sites throughout the region. By defining and creating ties between archaeological sites based upon proportions of decorated wares, Social Network Analysis allows for the hypothesized networks of the Mogollon Highlands to be represented graphically and examined further statistically.

The Social Network Analysis is conducted for 50 year intervals for the period of A.D. 700-1150 in order to examine changes in the networks over time. The graphic representations of the social networks are then georeferenced in order to compare social and spatial relationships. Measurements of centrality are calculated in order to examine and identify the central nodes, or sites, within the networks. The social networks can then be contextualized through an understanding of substantive and formalist economics, and ceramic production and exchange in order to draw conclusions regarding the changing networks and their relationship to the transition to above ground pueblo architecture.

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Ervin, Jason N. "A Network-Based Method for the Analysis of Use and Function in Stone Tool Kits| Implications for Late Prehistoric Settlement Patterning in Northeast Mississippi". Thesis, Mississippi State University, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10838928.

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A network-based method is developed for analyzing use in stone tool assemblages, where ’use’ denotes the tasks for which chipped edges are suitable. Modeling chipped edges as nodes, use-wear and retouch as edge traversals, use-life trajectories of chipped edges as interconnecting paths, and ‘tools’ as subnetworks over which design tolerances are maintained on edge morphology, the method is an attempt to improve on existing models, allowing for complex, continuous change and multiple uses throughout a chipped edge’s use-life. Avoiding analogy-based categories, the method is designed to highlight rather than obscure the possibilities for use and multi-use. Potential for integration into social-learning based models of cultural evolution is considered. The metric is employed to address the widely noted paucity of lithics in Late Prehistoric contexts of the southeastern U.S. Specifically, the Lyon’s Bluff site (22OK520, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi) is shown to exhibit substantial use-capacity, suggesting that paucity does not imply divestment.

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Wienhold, Michelle. "Spatial analysis and actor-network theory : a multi-scalar analytical study of the Chumash rock art of South-Central California". Thesis, University of Central Lancashire, 2014. http://clok.uclan.ac.uk/10714/.

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The aim of this research is to provide a more holistic approach to study Chumash rock art throughout their entire geographic region within South-Central California by applying geographic information systems (GIS), incorporating ethnohistoric and ethnographic data and utilising associated archaeological material under an Actor-Network Theory (ANT) framework. Through a review of past Chumash archaeological and rock art studies, I discuss where previous research is lacking and how that research was fragmentary due to focusing only on specific geographic areas or linguistic regions. As rock art is an artefact fixed within the terrain, I further argue it has a potential connection to the topography--particularly its relationship to Chumash landscapes and taskscapes by applying both formal and informed methodologies at multiple scales. By modifying the tenets of ANT to create a framework that uses the rock art data to define space, analyse its heterogeneity and connectivity and study its topographic entrenchment, this research conceptualises rock art’s networks. To conduct this research, I collated a large body of spatial and descriptive information for 254 rock art sites and associated archaeology. Spatial analyses were performed at multiple scales using GIS as a heuristic to conceptualise site clustering, landscape entrenchment and anisotropic movement for the collated data. While the rock art sites were used to define the multi-scalar spaces, results show that the identity of the sites change throughout space and time where rock art itself is a network and not exclusive to one specific Chumash network. Analysis of the data shows that the topographic setting entrenches the rock art and begins to represent the dynamic assembly of its heterogeneous network relations. Movement through the landscape reflects how the sites were connected or structured within their landscapes and taskscapes. Overall it reflects rock art’s interrelationships to the networked economic, social, ideological and political organisations of the Chumash and their rich ceremonial practices. Therefore, the Chumash rock art networks were as complex, dynamic, variable and heterogeneous as Chumash society and the rock art panels themselves.
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Borck, Lewis. "Lost Voices Found: An Archaeology of Contentious Politics in the Greater Southwest, A.D. 1100 - 1450". Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10117388.

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This dissertation uses a relational approach and a contentious politics framework to examine the archaeological record. Methodologically, it merges spatial and social network analyses to promote a geosocial archaeology. Combined, the articles create a counter-narrative that highlights how environmentally focused investigations fail to explain how and why societies in the Southwest often reorganize horizontally. The first article uses geosocial networks, which I argue represent memory maps, to reveal that the socially important, and sophisticated, act of forgetting was employed by people in the Gallina region during A.D. 1100–1300. A concomitant community level, settlement pattern analysis demonstrates similarities between the arrangement of Gallina and Basketmaker-era settlements. These historically situated settlement structures, combined with acts of forgetting, were used by Gallina region residents to institute and maintain a horizontally organized social movement that was likely aimed at rejecting the hierarchical social atmosphere in the Four Corners region. The second article proposes that as ideologically charged material goods are consumed, fissures within past ideological landscapes are revealed and that these fissures can demonstrate acts of resistance in the archaeological past. It also contends that social and environmental variables need to be combined for these conflicting religious and political practices to be correctly interpreted. The third article applies many of the ideas outlined in the second article to a case study in the Greater Southwest during A.D. 1200–1450. Fractures in the ideological landscape demonstrate that the Salado Phenomenon was a religious social movement formed around, and successful because of, its populist nature. Based on variations in how the Salado ideology interacted with contemporaneous hierarchical and non-hierarchical religious and political organizations it is probable that the Salado social movement formed around desires for the open access to religious knowledge.

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Pearce, Eiluned H. "The effects of latitude on hominin social network maintenance". Thesis, University of Oxford, 2013. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c51f63d2-6c07-46ec-81c8-8942afda8598.

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Social networks have been essential throughout hominin evolution, facilitating cooperative childrearing, transmission of cultural knowledge and the sharing of information and resources. As hominins dispersed out of Africa, these networks needed to be maintained at progressively higher latitudes. The first part of this thesis explores the impact of latitude on brain organisation and the possible implications for social cognition. I hypothesise that the lower temperatures and light levels found at higher latitudes select for larger bodies and visual systems, which in turn necessitate larger somatic and visual brain areas. Using orbit size to index eye and visual cortex size, I demonstrate a robust positive relationship between absolute latitude and orbit volume in recent humans. I show that Neanderthals, who solely inhabited high latitudes, have significantly larger orbits than contemporary anatomically modern humans (AMH), who evolved in lower latitude Africa and had only relatively recently dispersed into higher latitudes. Since Neanderthals and AMH dated 27-75kya have almost identical endocranial volumes, I argue that if a greater proportion of the Neanderthal brain was required for somatic and visual processing, this would reduce the volume of neural tissue available for other functions. Since, according to the Social Brain Hypothesis, neocortex volume is positively associated with social complexity, I propose that Neanderthals might have been limited to smaller social networks than AMH. The second part of the thesis explores the challenge of maintaining social networks across greater geographic distances at higher latitudes, where high travelling costs seem to prevent whole tribes from bonding during periodic aggregations. Using a gas model I predict that at lower latitudes daily subsistence mobility allows sufficient encounters between subgroups for the tribe to maintain connectivity, whereas in (Sub)Arctic biomes additional mechanisms are required to facilitate tribal cohesion. This may explain the apparent ‘explosion’ of Upper Palaeolithic art in Europe: symbolic representations allowed social ties to be sustained in the absence of frequent face-to-face contact. Overall, this thesis demonstrates that latitude may influence both brain organisation and cultural expression and argues that both can have a substantial impact on the maintenance of hominin social networks at high latitudes.
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Ojala, Carl-Gösta. "Sámi Prehistories : The Politics of Archaeology and Identity in Northernmost Europe". Doctoral thesis, Uppsala universitet, Arkeologi, 2009. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-108857.

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Throughout the history of archaeology, the Sámi (the indigenous people in northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and the Kola Peninsula in the Russian Federation) have been conceptualized as the “Others” in relation to the national identity and (pre)history of the modern states. It is only in the last decades that a field of Sámi archaeology that studies Sámi (pre)history in its own right has emerged, parallel with an ethnic and cultural revival among Sámi groups. This dissertation investigates the notions of Sámi prehistory and archaeology, partly from a research historical perspective and partly from a more contemporary political perspective. It explores how the Sámi and ideas about the Sámi past have been represented in archaeological narratives from the early 19th century until today, as well as the development of an academic field of Sámi archaeology. The study consists of four main parts: 1) A critical examination of the conceptualization of ethnicity, nationalism and indigeneity in archaeological research. 2) A historical analysis of the representations and debates on Sámi prehistory, primarily in Sweden but also to some extent in Norway and Finland, focusing on four main themes: the origin of the Sámi people, South Sámi prehistory as a contested field of study, the development of reindeer herding, and Sámi pre-Christian religion. 3) An analysis of the study of the Sámi past in Russia, and a discussion on archaeological research and constructions of ethnicity and indigeneity in the Russian Federation and the Soviet Union. 4) An examination of the claims for greater Sámi self-determination concerning cultural heritage management and the debates on repatriation and reburial in the Nordic countries. In the dissertation, it is argued that there is a great need for discussions on the ethics and politics of archaeological research. A relational network approach is suggested as a way of opening up some of the black boxes and bounded, static entities in the representations of people in the past in the North.
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Scholnick, Jonathan. "APPRENTICESHIP, CULTURAL TRANSMISSION AND THE EVOLUTION OF CULTURAL TRADITIONS IN HISTORIC NEW ENGLAND GRAVESTONES". Diss., The University of Arizona, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194673.

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Cultural evolutionary models that relate spatial and temporal patterning in artifact sequences to human social learning processes and history have made many recent advances. Specifically, these models connect evolutionary forces and social leaning mechanisms along cultural pathways with expectations that can be assessed using material culture. In this dissertation, I use an historical archaeology case study of carved New England gravestones to evaluate three different aspects of cultural transmission and artifact patterns. First, I study the role of social network structure in the transmission of cultural information among carvers organized in workshops that were principally comprised of a carver and his apprentices. The results of this study suggest that the motifs reflect widespread similarity that transcends workshop organization. However, the finer grained decorative elements that make up these motifs correspond with cultural lineages of gravestone carvers. Second, I examine the relationship between the diffusion of innovations and cultural transmission mechanisms that result in spatiotemporal patterning. The spatial patterning suggests that social contagion among consumers created brief instances of wave-like diffusion from a distinct workshop, highlighting the role of consumer choice. A review of probate payments shows that gravestones were rarely purchased from distance sources, as transport costs could be prohibitive. The spatial patterning and historic record suggest that carvers also learned from other carvers creating a hierarchical diffusion process. These two populations created a feedback mechanism that leads to complex emergent phenomena, as illustrated by the rapid and widespread adoption of the cherub motif. Third, the neutral model of stylistic variation is applied to gravestone data to examine the ways that increased consumption and an expanding carving industry led to dominant decorative motifs. This study shows that neutrality can be a fleeting and transitional state between the dominance of single decorative styles. These three studies use New England gravestones to illustrate the evolutionary forces and cultural transmission mechanisms among artifact producers and consumers, which generated the stylistic patterning we observe in the archaeological record.
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Winter, Jan-Robert. "Falken från öst eller korpen från väst? : En analys av bronserade nycklar med fågelmotiv från Kyrksundet i sydvästra Finland". Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Arkeologi, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-385903.

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This paper contains an analysis of the bronzed keys with bird motifs that were discovered during archaeological investigations between the years 1991 and 1997 at Kyrksundet, in the archipelago of southwestern Finland. Bronzed keys with bird motifs have never been found in Finland before, but similar keys have been found both in Birka and on Gotland, Sweden. The aim with this paper is firstly to analyse and compare the keys from Kyrksundet, Birka and Gotland, and their find contexts. Secondly, together with the results from the analysis, the following questions will be discussed; What is the meaning behind the bird motif, why can these keys be found at Kyrksundet, and who were the people that had these keys in their possession during the Viking Age. The symbolic aspect of the keys is a strong theme in this discussion, because the underlaying theory in this paper is that the keys most likely had both a worldly and a cosmological meaning. Earlier archaeological investigations mainly have associated these keys with the Nordic peoples and their eastern connections during the Viking Age. Reason behind this association is that the birds on the motif have been interpreted as falcons and the falcon has a relatively strong connection to the Rurik dynasty that ruled in Novgorod and Kiev. Whether the bird is a falcon or not, is however a question that will be discussed in this paper. The analysis performed in this paper, shows that the bird motif on the keys shares more similarities with a raven motif that was used on the British Isles than with the falcon motif that was used in Novgorod and Kiev. This paper will therefore include a suggestion for another perspective, where the keys might be connected to the Nordic peoples and their western connections.
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Johansson, Pär. "Makt, nätverk och mumier : En studie av Victoriamuseets egyptiska samlings skapande, den svenska egyptologin och svenskt samlande under 1800-talet". Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för arkeologi och antikens kultur, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-161342.

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This paper focuses on Swedish practices regarding the collecting and exhibiting of Egyptian cultural items at the Victoria Museum in Uppsala during the period between 1882 and 1904. It works to establish who the individuals responsible for this collection were, what their social standing were and how they were connected to each other and other foreign collecting practitioners using the actornetwork-theory and comparative studies.
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Livros sobre o assunto "Network archaeology"

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Radimilahy, Marie de Chantal, e Felix Chami. The journal of African Archaeology Network. Dar es Salaam, Tanzania: E&D Vision Pub., 2010.

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John, Kinahan, e Kinahan J, eds. The African Archaeology Network: Research in progress. Dar es Salaam, Tanzania: Dar es Salaam University Press Ltd., 2006.

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Felix, Chami, Pwiti Gilbert e Radimilahy Marie de Chantal, eds. The African archaeology network: Reports and a review. Dar es Salaam: Dar es Salaam University Press Ltd., 2004.

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Anthony, Don. Minds, bodies and souls: An archaeology of the Olympic Heritage Network. London: Author, 1997.

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Knappett, Carl. An archaeology of interaction: Network perspectives on material culture and society. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.

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Group, Canadian Heritage Information Network Documentation Research. Archaeological sites data dictionary of the Canadian Heritage Information Network. [Ottawa]: Documentation Research Group, 1994.

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Watrall, Ethan, Eric Christopher Kansa e Sarah Whitcher Kansa. Archaeology 2.0: New tools for communication and collaboration. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2011.

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Hansen, Ulla Lund, e Anna Bitner-Wróblewska. Worlds apart?: Contacts across the Baltic Sea in the Iron Age : network Denmark - Poland, 2005 - 2008. København: Det Kongelige Nordiske Oldkriftselskab, 2010.

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Bogdani, Julian. Archeologia e tecnologie di rete: Metodi, strumenti e risorse digitali. Roma: BraDypUS.net communicating cultural heritage, 2019.

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Galioto, Giusj, e Elisa Chiara Portale. Scienza e archeologia: Un efficace connubio per la divulgazione della cultura scientifica. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 2017.

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Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Network archaeology"

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Fennell, Christopher C. "African Diaspora Archaeology Network (ADAN)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 63–64. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_1311.

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Fennell, Christopher C. "African Diaspora Archaeology Network (ADAN)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 1–2. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51726-1_1311-2.

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Fennell, Christopher C. "African Diaspora Archaeology Network (ADAN)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 47–48. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_1311.

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Durney, Mark. "Museum Security Network (MSN)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 7559–60. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_1045.

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Wiltshire, Kelly D. "Actor Network Theory (ANT)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 22–26. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_3401.

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Wiltshire, Kelly D. "Actor Network Theory (ANT)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 1–5. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51726-1_3401-1.

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Durney, Mark. "Museum Security Network (MSN)". In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, 5116–18. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_1045.

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Ertsen, Maurits W. "Modelling Gaia: Towards an Actor-Network Modelling Framework in Archaeology". In Themes in Contemporary Archaeology, 95–105. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-34336-0_6.

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Orser, Charles E. "Network Theory and the Archaeology of Modern History". In Global Archaeological Theory, 77–95. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-306-48652-0_7.

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Makvandi, Leila. "Glimpse of Highways Network of Achaemenid Empire: Construction, Maintenance and Service". In Archaeology of Iran in the Historical Period, 199–208. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-41776-5_16.

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Trabalhos de conferências sobre o assunto "Network archaeology"

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Magner, Abram, e Arun Padakandla. "Network Archaeology via Epidemic Processes: The Case of Growing Trees". In 2018 56th Annual Allerton Conference on Communication, Control, and Computing (Allerton). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/allerton.2018.8636003.

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An, Seoyoung, Georgia Channing, Catherine Schuman e Michela Taufer. "VINARCH: A Visual Analytics Interactive Tool for Neural Network Archaeology". In 2023 IEEE International Conference on Cluster Computing Workshops (CLUSTER Workshops). IEEE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/clusterworkshops61457.2023.00020.

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Yu, Kai, Zhichao Li, Yi Duan, Lin Wang, Jun Wang e Jinye Peng. "Multi-scale convolutional autoencoder network-based Implicit Information mining of cultural relics". In Optics for Arts, Architecture, and Archaeology (O3A) IX, editado por Roger Groves e Haida Liang. SPIE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2673753.

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Liu, Lu, Kai Ma, Jing Yan, Fulai Xing, Wanqing Zhao, Shenglin Peng e Lin Wang. "Hyperspectral image fusion based on dual-resolution fusion feature mutual guidance network". In Optics for Arts, Architecture, and Archaeology (O3A) IX, editado por Roger Groves e Haida Liang. SPIE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2673754.

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5

D'Andrea, Andrea, Antonella Coralini, Angela Bosco, Andrea Fiorini e Rosario Valentini. "A 3D topographic network for the study and maintenance of the Insula III of Herculaneum". In 2018 Metrology for Archaeology and Cultural Heritage (MetroArchaeo). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/metroarchaeo43810.2018.9089809.

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Zabari, Noemi. "Analysis of craquelure patterns in historical painting using image processing along with neural network algorithms". In Optics for Arts, Architecture, and Archaeology (O3A) VIII, editado por Roger Groves e Haida Liang. SPIE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2593982.

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Lewis, Kemper, Deborah Moore-Russo, Phil Cormier, Andrew Olewnik, Gül Kremer, Conrad Tucker, Tim Simpson e Omar Ashour. "The Assessment of Product Archaeology as a Platform for Contextualizing Engineering Design". In ASME 2013 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2013-13165.

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Many engineering departments struggle to meet “the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context” (Outcome h) that is required for ABET. As a result, engineering students receive meaningful contextual experiences in piecemeal fashion and graduate with a lack of concrete competencies that bridge knowledge and practice in the global world in which they will live and work. By considering products as designed artifacts with a history rooted in their development, our product archaeology framework combines concepts from archaeology with advances in cyber-enhanced product dissection to implement pedagogical innovations that address the significant educational gap. In this paper, we focus on assessing elements of a sustainable and scalable foundation that can support novel approaches aimed at educating engineering students to understand the global, economic, environmental, and societal context and impact of engineering solutions. This foundation is being developed across a network of partner institutions. We present recent results from freshman, sophomore, and senior courses at two of the partners in the national network of institutions.
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Kasparova, Irena. "HOW TO EDUCATE CZECH CHILDREN: SOCIAL NETWORK AS A SPACE OF PARENTAL ETHNOTHEORIES NEGOTIATION". In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s8.012.

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Hookk, D. "Web Analytics as a tool for analyzing a network resource with a variety of sources on the archaeological research materials". In Historical research in the context of data science: Information resources, analytical methods and digital technologies. LLC MAKS Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m1837.978-5-317-06529-4/384-390.

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Despite the already introduced concept of Webometrics, the visitors counter has considered as a main indicator of the effectiveness of the museum open sources. The article presents the statistical data and observations made during the work on the start-up project “Digital Encyclopedia of the Hermitage. Vol. 1. Archaeology”, as well as during the COVID-19 quarantine period, when communication with virtual visitors became a priority in museums.
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Rosales Ávila, Francisco Javier, José Luis Pérez-García, Carlos Colomo, José M. Gómez-López e Manuel A. Ureña. "MODELIZACIÓN Y SIMULACION DE LAS POSIBLES POSICIONES DE LAS ATALAYAS DE LA FORTALEZA DE LA MOTA EN ALCALA LA REAL, MEDIANTE TECNICAS DE ANALISIS VISUAL". In ARQUEOLÓGICA 2.0 - 8th International Congress on Archaeology, Computer Graphics, Cultural Heritage and Innovation. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/arqueologica8.2016.3562.

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The cultural heritage plays a very important role in the Smart management of an area, and geospatial technologies are a perfect tool for the heritage knowledge, management and analysis. Photogrammetry, UAV systems and geographic information systems, can help in cataloguing the cultural heritage of a city. The main turistic value for Alcalá la Real, is the Monumental Group of the Fortress of La Mota and their related monuments.As the principal objetive of the Project, an analysis and the calculation of the optimal location of the watchtower network is made. To achieve this, on the one hand photogrammetry technics are used to get the geometric information of the studied area. On the other hand, photogrammetry through UAV systems is used to obtain the 3D model of one of the watchtowers, which is better preserved than others. Finally, programming tools are applied over GIS for the analysis and calculation of the optimal location of this watchtower network.
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Relatórios de organizações sobre o assunto "Network archaeology"

1

Milek, Karen, e Richard Jones, eds. Science in Scottish Archaeology: ScARF Panel Report. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, setembro de 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/scarf.06.2012.193.

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The main recommendations of the panel report can be summarised under four key headings:  High quality, high impact research: the importance of archaeological science is reflected in work that explores issues connected to important contemporary topics, including: the demography of, the nature of movement of, and contact between peoples; societal resilience; living on the Atlantic edge of Europe; and coping with environmental and climatic change. A series of large-scale and integrated archaeological science projects are required to stimulate research into these important topics. To engage fully with Science in Scottish Archaeology iv these questions data of sufficient richness is required that is accessible, both within Scotland and internationally. The RCAHMS’ database Canmore provides a model for digital dissemination that should be built on.  Integration: Archaeological science should be involved early in the process of archaeological investigation and as a matter of routine. Resultant data needs to be securely stored, made accessible and the research results widely disseminated. Sources of advice and its communication must be developed and promoted to support work in the commercial, academic, research, governmental and 3rd sectors.  Knowledge exchange and transfer: knowledge, data and skills need to be routinely transferred and embedded across the archaeological sector. This will enable the archaeological science community to better work together, establishing routes of communication and improving infrastructure. Improvements should be made to communication between different groups including peers, press and the wider public. Mechanisms exist to enable the wider community to engage with, and to feed into, the development of the archaeological and scientific database and to engage with current debates. Projects involving the wider community in data generation should be encouraged and opportunities for public engagement should be pursued through, for example, National Science Week and Scottish Archaeology Month.  Networks and forums: A network of specialists should be promoted to aid collaboration, provide access to the best advice, and raise awareness of current work. This would be complemented by creating a series inter-disciplinary working groups, to discuss and articulate archaeological science issues. An online service to match people (i.e. specialist or student) to material (whether e.g. environmental sample, artefactual assemblage, or skeletal assemblage) is also recommended. An annual meeting should also be held at which researchers would be able to promote current and future work, and draw attention to materials available for analysis, and to specialists/students looking to work on particular assemblages or projects. Such meetings could be rolled into a suitable public outreach event.
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2

Horejs, Barbara, e Ulrike Schuh, eds. PREHISTORY & WEST ASIAN/NORTHEAST AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY 2021–2023. Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, dezembro de 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/oeai.pwana2021-2023.

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The long-established research of Prehistory and West Asian/Northeast African archaeology (the former Institute for Oriental and European Archaeology, OREA) at the Austrian Academy of Sciences was transformed into a department of the »new« Austrian Archaeological Institute (OeAI) at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in 2021. This merging of several institutes into the new OeAI offers a wide range of new opportunities for basic and interdisciplinary research, which support the traditional research focus as well as the development of new projects in world archaeology. The research areas of the Department of Prehistory and West Asian/Northeast African Archaeology include Quaternary archaeology, Prehistory, Near Eastern archaeology and Egyptology. The groups cover an essential cultural area of prehistoric and early historical developments in Europe, Northeast Africa and West Asia. Prehistory is embedded in the world archaeology concept without geographical borders, including projects beyond this core zone, as well as a scientific and interdisciplinary approach. The focus lies in the time horizon from the Pleistocene about 2.6 million years ago to the transformation of societies into historical epochs in the 1st millennium BC. The chronological expertise of the groups covers the periods Palaeolithic, Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Bronze Age and Early Iron Age. The archaeology of West Asia and Northeast Africa is linked to the Mediterranean and Europe, which enables large-scale and chronologically broad basic research on human history. The department consists of the following seven groups: »Quaternary Archaeology«, »Prehistoric Phenomena«, »Prehistoric Identities«, »Archaeology in Egypt and Sudan«, »Archaeology of the Levant«, »Mediterranean Economies« and »Urnfield Culture Networks«. The groups conduct fieldwork and material analyses in Austria, Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Italy, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, North Macedonia, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Greece, Cyprus, Türkiye, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, Lebanon, Israel, Egypt, Sudan and South Africa.
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Atkinson, Dan, e Alex Hale, eds. From Source to Sea: ScARF Marine and Maritime Panel Report. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, setembro de 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/scarf.09.2012.126.

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The main recommendations of the panel report can be summarised under four headings: 1. From Source to Sea: River systems, from their source to the sea and beyond, should form the focus for research projects, allowing the integration of all archaeological work carried out along their course. Future research should take a holistic view of the marine and maritime historic environment, from inland lakes that feed freshwater river routes, to tidal estuaries and out to the open sea. This view of the landscape/seascape encompasses a very broad range of archaeology and enables connections to be made without the restrictions of geographical or political boundaries. Research strategies, programmes From Source to Sea: ScARF Marine and Maritime Panel Report iii and projects can adopt this approach at multiple levels; from national to site-specific, with the aim of remaining holistic and cross-cutting. 2. Submerged Landscapes: The rising research profile of submerged landscapes has recently been embodied into a European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) Action; Submerged Prehistoric Archaeology and Landscapes of the Continental Shelf (SPLASHCOS), with exciting proposals for future research. Future work needs to be integrated with wider initiatives such as this on an international scale. Recent projects have begun to demonstrate the research potential for submerged landscapes in and beyond Scotland, as well as the need to collaborate with industrial partners, in order that commercially-created datasets can be accessed and used. More data is required in order to fully model the changing coastline around Scotland and develop predictive models of site survival. Such work is crucial to understanding life in early prehistoric Scotland, and how the earliest communities responded to a changing environment. 3. Marine & Maritime Historic Landscapes: Scotland’s coastal and intertidal zones and maritime hinterland encompass in-shore islands, trans-continental shipping lanes, ports and harbours, and transport infrastructure to intertidal fish-traps, and define understanding and conceptualisation of the liminal zone between the land and the sea. Due to the pervasive nature of the Marine and Maritime historic landscape, a holistic approach should be taken that incorporates evidence from a variety of sources including commercial and research archaeology, local and national societies, off-shore and onshore commercial development; and including studies derived from, but not limited to history, ethnology, cultural studies, folklore and architecture and involving a wide range of recording techniques ranging from photography, laser imaging, and sonar survey through to more orthodox drawn survey and excavation. 4. Collaboration: As is implicit in all the above, multi-disciplinary, collaborative, and cross-sector approaches are essential in order to ensure the capacity to meet the research challenges of the marine and maritime historic environment. There is a need for collaboration across the heritage sector and beyond, into specific areas of industry, science and the arts. Methods of communication amongst the constituent research individuals, institutions and networks should be developed, and dissemination of research results promoted. The formation of research communities, especially virtual centres of excellence, should be encouraged in order to build capacity.
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