Archaeology: A Very Short Introduction
Summary
The feel-good place to buy books

Archaeology: A Very Short Introduction by Paul G Bahn
This entertaining Very Short Introduction reflects the enduring popularity of archaeology-a subject which appeals as a pastime, career, and academic discipline, encompasses the whole globe, and surveys 2.5 million years. From deserts to jungles, from deep caves to mountain tops, from pebble tools to satellite photographs, from excavation to abstract theory, archaeology interacts with nearly every other discipline in its attempts to reconstruct the past.
Dating from 1953, Paul Bahn decided at an early age that he wanted to be an archaeologist since it seemed to be better than working for a living. As a child he dug holes in his back garden in Hull and found fragments of pottery, which proved to be Willow Pattern (Woolworths) and not Ancient Roman, but the thrill of discovery remained intact.
He later studied archaeology at Cambridge, obtained his Ph.D., and adopted the regulation beard and shapeless sweaters, but despite weeks of cutting through the South American jungle in search of lost settlements, he failed to acquire a taste for either tobacco or vast quantities of alcohol.
He therefore settled for freelance writing about what he considers to be the more interesting aspects of the subject such as horse teeth and engravings of genitalia (viz: Crib Biting: Tethered Horses in the Palaeolithic?; No Sex, Please, We're Aurignacians).
Paul Bahn's publications include a brick-like text, Archaeology co-authored with Colin Renfrew, Easter Island, Earth Island co-authored with John Flenley, and the lavishly illustrated Journey Through the Ice Age. Fortunately all this work entails a certain amount of travel which is why this book was written on a beach in Fiji rather than in a Portakabin by a rained-off rescue dig in Milton Keynes.
He later studied archaeology at Cambridge, obtained his Ph.D., and adopted the regulation beard and shapeless sweaters, but despite weeks of cutting through the South American jungle in search of lost settlements, he failed to acquire a taste for either tobacco or vast quantities of alcohol.
He therefore settled for freelance writing about what he considers to be the more interesting aspects of the subject such as horse teeth and engravings of genitalia (viz: Crib Biting: Tethered Horses in the Palaeolithic?; No Sex, Please, We're Aurignacians).
Paul Bahn's publications include a brick-like text, Archaeology co-authored with Colin Renfrew, Easter Island, Earth Island co-authored with John Flenley, and the lavishly illustrated Journey Through the Ice Age. Fortunately all this work entails a certain amount of travel which is why this book was written on a beach in Fiji rather than in a Portakabin by a rained-off rescue dig in Milton Keynes.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780192853790 |
| ISBN 10 | 0192853791 |
| Title | Archaeology: A Very Short Introduction |
| Author | Paul G Bahn |
| Series | Very Short Introductions |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Year published | 2000-02-24 |
| Number of pages | 128 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |