242
Views
16
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original articles

Preventive conservation for archaeological sites

  • Earl, N., personal communication.
  • Dobinson, N., and Denison, S., Metal Detecting and Archaeology in England, English Heritage and the Council for British Archaeology, London (1995) 51.
  • Coles, B., and Coles, J., Sweet Track to Glastonbury: The Prehistory of the Somerset Levels, Thames and Hudson, London (1986).
  • Hall, D., and Coles, J., Fenland Survey, An Essay in Landscape and Persistence, English Heritage Archaeological Report No.1, English Heritage, London (1994).
  • Van der Noort, R., and Davies, P., Wetland Heritage: An Archaeological Assessment of the Humber Wetlands, Humber Wetlands Project, Hull (1993).
  • Fulford, M., and Champion, T., England’s Coastal Heritage, English Heritage, London ( forthcoming).
  • Coles, B., Wetlands Management, A Survey for English Heritage, WARP Occasional Paper No.9, Wetland Archaeology Research Project, Exeter (1995) 72–73.
  • Corfield, M., ‘Monitoring the condition of waterlogged archaeological sites’ in Proceedings of the 5th ICOM Group on Wet Organic Archaeological Materials Conference, ed. P. Hoffman, Portland, Maine (1994).
  • Corfield, M., ‘The role of monitoring in the assessment and management of archaeological sites’ in Hidden Dimensions, The Cultural Significance of Wetland Archaeology, ed. K. Bernick, University of British Columbia, Vancouver ( forthcoming).
  • Huntings Land and Environment, ‘Investigation of site conditions and repair or replacement of monitoring points [at the Rose Theatre]’, report R898: HER-07 to English Heritage (1994).
  • Van der Noort, R., and Ellis, S., Wetland Heritage of Holderness: An Archaeological Survey, Humber Wetlands Project, Hull (1995) 344–347.
  • Heathwaite, A., and Göttlich, K., Mires, Process, Exploitation and Conservation, John Wiley, London (1993) 222–223.
  • French, C., and Taylor, M., ‘Desiccation and destruction: the immediate effect of dewatering at Etton’ in Oxford Journal of Archaeology 4 (2) (1985) 139–156.
  • Caple, C., ‘Defining a reburial environment; research problems characterising waterlogged anoxic environments’ in Proceedings of the 5th ICOM Group on Wet Organic Archaeological Materials Conference, ed. P. Hoffman, Portland, Maine (1994).
  • Caple, C., and Dungworth, D., ‘Investigations into waterlogged burial environments’ in Archaeological Science 1995, ed. E.A. Slater and A. Sinclair, Oxbow, Oxford ( forthcoming).
  • Pointing, S., ‘Gamma ray irradiation and reburial as a potential novel passive conservation treatment for waterlogged archaeological timbers from the Mary Rose’, PhD thesis, University of Portsmouth (1995) ( unpublished).
  • Florian, M-L.E., ‘The underwater environment’ in Conservation of Marine’ Archaeological Objects, ed. C. Pearson, Butterworth, London (1987) 1–20.
  • Wiltshire, P.E.J., Edwards, K.J., and Bond, S., ‘Microbially derived metallic sulphide spherules, pollen and the waterlogging of archaeological sites’ in American Association of Stratigraphic Palynology, Contribution Series No. 29 (1994).
  • Merrett-Jones, M., ‘Effects of sewage enrichment upon the integrity of the fabric of marine sites of archaeological importance’, final report to Natural Environmental Research Council, ref. GR/H98342, University of Surrey (1995).
  • Maltby, E., et al., ‘Building a new approach to the investigation and assessment of wetland ecosystems functioning’ in Global Wetlands, Old World and New, ed. W.J. Mitsch, Elsevier (1994).

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.