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More than just numbers ? The role of science in Roman Archaeology, (Suppl. JRA 91), 2012, 191 p. -
I. Shrüfer-Kolb, Introduction : Rome was not built in a day : C. P. Snow and the significance of his Rede lecture today ; R. Veal, From context to economy : charcoal as an archaeological interpretative tool. A case study from Pompeii (3rd c. B.C.-A.D. 79) ; A. Sperduti, L. Bondioli, P. Garnsey, Skeletal evidence for occupational structure at the coastal towns of Portus and Velia (1st-3rd c. A.D.) ; M. Groot, Animal bones as a tool for investigating social and economic change : horse-breeding veterans in the civitas Batavorum ; L. J. E. Cramp, R. P. Evershed, H. Eckardt, Are you what you grind ? A comparison of organic residues from ceramics at two Romano-British sites ; P. White, R. Siddall, C. Underwood, M. BouDagher-Fadel, The geological provenance of coloured carbonate mosaic materials used at Fishbourne ; R. Fillery-Travis, Multidisciplinary analysis of Romano horse-and-rider brooches from Bosworth ; M. Ponting, The potential of the scientific analysis of Roman military equipment : the case of Syria-Palestina ; A. M. Pollard, Science, archaeology and the Romans, or "What has scientific archaeology ever done for the Romans?".
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