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Original Article - Theme 4: Preserving Archaeological Remains In Situ — Can We Document It Works? (Chaired by Mike Corfield and Vicki Richards)

Partial Solutions to Partially Understood Problems — The Experience of In Situ Monitoring and Preservation in Somerset’s Peatlands

Pages 397-405 | Published online: 22 Nov 2013

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Read on this site (2)

Michael J. Stratigos. (2022) What Wetland are We Protecting and Restoring? Quantifying the Human Creation of Protected Areas in Scotland. Journal of Wetland Archaeology 0:0, pages 1-17.
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Michael J. Stratigos. (2016) The lost lochs of Scotland: tracking land-use change and its effects on the archaeological record. Journal of Wetland Archaeology 16:1, pages 33-51.
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Articles from other publishers (3)

C.G. Björdal & J. Rönnby. (2023) Evaluation of in situ preservation method applied at a terrestrial archaeological shipwreck site by use of sacrificial wood samples installed for 25 years. International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation 176, pages 105528.
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Henning Matthiesen, Richard Brunning, Bethune Carmichael & Jørgen Hollesen. (2022) Wetland archaeology and the impact of climate change. Antiquity, pages 1-15.
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Henning Matthiesen. (2015) Detecting and quantifying ongoing decay of organic archaeological remains: A discussion of different approaches. Quaternary International 368, pages 43-50.
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