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List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Chapter 1 – Introduction (William Caraher, R. Scott Moore & David
K. Pettegrew)
1.1. History of Work in the Micro-Region
1.2. Debates in Mediterranean Studies
1.3. Plan of the Work
1.4. Acknowledgements
Chapter 2 – Intensive Survey (William Caraher, Dimitri Nakassis &
David K. Pettegrew)
2.1. High-Resolution Survey
2.3. Distributional Data: Counting and Chronotypes
2.4. Geological and Geomorphological Survey
2.5. Conclusions
Chapter 3 – Survey Data and Experiments in Sampling (David K.
Pettegrew)
3.1. The 2004 and 2006 Experiments: Pedestrian Survey (20%) vs.
Hoovering (5%)
3.2. The 2010 Experiments: Pedestrian Resurvey and Hoovering
Sub-Units
3.3. Discussion
Chapter 4 – Catalogue of Finds (R. Scott Moore & Brandon R.
Olson)
4.1. Fine Wares
4.2. Kitchen Wares
4.3. Medium Coarse Wares
4.4. Coarse Wares
4.5. Amphorae
4.6. Pithoi
4.7. Roof Tiles
4.8. Lamps
4.9. Conclusions on Ceramic Assemblage
4.10. Figurines (Maria Andrioti)
4.11. A Contextual and Epigraphic Analysis of the Inscribed Glandes
(Sling Bullets)from Vigla (Brandon R. Olson)
4.12. Lithic Artifacts (P. Nick Kardulias)
Chapter 5 – Artifact Distributions (William Caraher & David K.
Pettegrew)
5.1. The Survey Assemblage
5.2. The Distributional Pattern of Total Artifact Density:
Zones
5.3. Period-Based Analysis
Chapter 6 – Features in the Landscape (William Caraher)
6.1. Features
6.2. The Hellenistic Fortification Wall at Vigla
6.3. The Venetian Wall at Koutsopetria
6.4. The Early Christian Basilica at Koutsopetria
6.5. Conclusions
Chapter 7 – Historical Conclusions (William Caraher)
7.1. Koutsopetria in Prehistory
7.2. Koutsopetria in the Early Iron Age and the Geometric
Period
7.3. Koutsopetria in the Cypro-Archaic Period
7.4. Koutsopetria in the Cypro-Classical Period
7.5. Koutsopetria in the Hellenistic Period
7.6. Koutsopetria in the Early Roman Period
7.7. Koutsopetria in Late Antiquity
7.8. Koutsopetria after Antiquity
Bibliography
Contributors
Index
William Caraher is a historian and archaeologist
in the Department of History at the University of North Dakota. He
specializes in survey archaeology in Greece and Cyprus, the
archaeology of the 21st century Bakken oil boom in North Dakota,
and punk archaeology worldwide.
David Pettegrew is Associate Professor of History
at Messiah College. A scholar of the Roman and Late Antique
Mediterranean, his interests lie in histories of landscapes. He
co-directs the Pyla-Koutsopetria Archaeological Project and is
involved in research related to the Corinthia, Greece.
R. Scott Moore is Professor of History at Indiana
University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on ceramics and
trade in the eastern Mediterranean during the Roman and Late
Antique periods. He co-directs the Pyla-Koutsopetria Archaeological
Project and conducts research in Cyprus.
This volume adds to [the authors'] already impressive engagements
with the practice and impact of archaeological surveying (both in
print and online), and is vital for anybody interested in
diachronic landscapes, the practice of archaeological survey and
the presentation of archaeological data. This is easily one of the
most important books on survey to have been published in the past
five years.
Dan Stewart, University of Leicester, Antiquity, October 2015
This volume represents a significant contribution to the published
survey data for Cyprus, and the authors' straightforward
discussions of the region's material will form a critical and
methodologically rigorous reference for those interested in the
region or in island-wide trends. Pyla Koutsopetria Archaeological
Project certainly fills a gap in our understandings of
first-millennium CE landscapes for the eastern coastal areas of
Cyprus. The in-depth discussions of sampling and grid strategies
will also be a great resource for scholars and practitioners of
Mediterranean survey more broadly. [...] PKAP places a lesser-known
landscape in a prominent position and provides robust material for
future investigations.
Catherine Kearns, Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 2016.02.39
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