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Department of Archaeology

 

SCATTER investigates the multivocal notion of territory in Protohistory through the study of settlement patterns in ecological settings. Specifically, SCATTER focus on the Central Anatolian region during the Middle and Late Bronze Age, i.e. the second millennium B.C. The goal is to acquire better understanding of changes in landscape uses within a growing centralised state's power. To achieve this, SCATTER employs a range of state-of-the-art spatial analysis methodologies while reflecting on the influence of mapping on the perception of the ancient state as an idealised continuous territorial entity. The multidisciplinary research results will contribute significantly to the definition and perception of territories in Protohistory while interrogating the modern idealised vision of territory. SCATTER will embed archaeological data into wider discourses on change and resilience in landscapes.

Keywords: Landscape archaeology, Spatial analysis, Human-environment Interactions, Territory, Prehistoric Anatolia.  

 

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation

Project Tags

Themes: 
Environment, Landscapes and Settlement
Periods of interest: 
Copper/Bronze Age
Other Late Prehistory
Geographical areas: 
Mediterranean
Mesopotamia and the Near East
Research Expertise / Fields of study: 
Material Culture
Computational and Quantitative Archaeology
Environmental Archaeology, Geoarchaeology, and Landscape studies
Subjects: 
Archaeology
Assyriology and Mesopotamian Archaeology
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