Description
This timely volume therefore draws together the inventive methodology that has been developed for this material and combines it with a fuller interpretation of the archaeological funerary context. It demonstrates how an innovative methodology, when applied to a challenging material, can produce new and exciting interpretations of archaeological sites and funerary contexts.
The reader is introduced to the nature of burned human remains and the destructive effect that fire can have on the body. Subsequent chapters describe important cremation practices and sites from around the world and from the Neolithic period to the modern day. By emphasising the need for a robust methodology combined with a nuanced interpretation, it is possible to begin to appreciate the significance and wide-spread adoption of this practice of dealing with the dead.
About the Author
Tim Thompson is a Reader in Biological & Forensic Anthropology in the School of Science & Engineering at Teeside University. His main areas of research focus on the human body and how it changes, particularly in the modern context, with emphasis on studying the effects of burning on the skeleton, the development of new analytical tools and the role of forensic anthropology.
Reviews
I congratulate the contributors and editor for producing a solid, valuable, and far-ranging collection that constitutes a timely and necessary addition to the study of death and burial in the human past. * European Journal of Archaeology *
These two books reveal, through international case studies, the enormous variety of ways in which inhumation or cremation can occur and has taken place, and why that might have been so. * British Archaeology *
Book Information
ISBN 9781782978480
Author Tim Thompson
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Oxbow Books
Publisher Oxbow Books