ABSTRACT

‘Archaeology is for people’ is the theme of this book. Split between the academic and commercial sectors, archaeological investigation is also deeply embedded in the needs of local communities, making it simultaneously an art, science and social science. Such a multi-disciplinary discipline needs special methods and creative freedom, not repetitive responses. Carver argues that commercial procedures and academic theory are both suffocating creativity in fieldwork. He’d like to see us bring much more diversity and technical ingenuity to every opportunity, and maintains this is more a matter of getting ourselves free of dogma than needing more time and money. This has many implications for the way archaeology is designed and procured – moving archaeologists up the professional ladder from builder to architect, with contracts based on quality of design, not the price.

chapter 1|25 pages

A Visit to the Ancestors

chapter 3|30 pages

On the Street: Archaeologists and Society

chapter 4|30 pages

Design on Tour

chapter 5|27 pages

From Procurement to Product: A Road Map

chapter 6|18 pages

Making Archaeology Happen