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The Archaeology of Woodland Exploitation in the Greater Exmoor Area in the Historic Period
Judith A. Cannell
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The subject of this work is the archaeology of exploitation of woodland on and around Exmoor, in south-west England. It fits into the existing body of research at three levels. Firstly, it attempts to analyse patterns of woodland management over a large area.In this respect, it forms part of a modern trend, with many writers on woodland now recognising the need to move away from histories of individual woods and adopt a wider perspective. Secondly, the area studied in this research is an upland and its fringes, with a dispersed settlement pattern, which is an environment of a type still under-represented in work on landscape development. In particular, work on woodland has, until recent years, tended to focus on the southern, eastern and central lowlands of England, which may have more centralised patterns of settlement. Thirdly, the geographical area selected for study, Exmoor and its fringes, saw relatively little sustained scholarly work until the 1990s, in comparison to other uplands of the south-west, and knowledge of its past land use has consequently been extremely limited. Perceptions of its woodland have been conditioned by the need to collect data for management purposes, generating a series of surveys and assessments carried out from the mid-1990s. The results of these surveys, which recorded a high level of archaeological features relating to woodland management, indicate that further progress can now be made by analysing and interpreting the data. The period covered by this research runs from the date of Domesday Book (1086) to the early 19th century.
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Front Cover
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Title Page
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Copyright
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Dedication
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Table of Contents
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Acknowledgements
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List of Figures
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List of Tables
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List of accompanying material
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Definitions
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Glossary
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CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
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CHAPTER 2 RESEARCH REVIEW
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CHAPTER 3 STUDY AREA ANALYSIS
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CHAPTER 4 THE CASE STUDIES
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CHAPTER 5 THEMES
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CHAPTER 6 CONCLUSIONS
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Appendix I Field data record sheet
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Appendix II Descriptions of woods
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Appendix III The woods database
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Appendix IV Database entries for woods in the case studies
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Appendix V Wood size distribution by parish
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Appendix VI Descriptions of woods grouped by scores in principal components analysis (1st component)
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Appendix VII Features recorded in reconnaissance survey of woods in Barle case study
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Appendix VIII Features recorded in surveys of woods in Horner case study
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Appendix IX Tree Survey Documentation
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Appendix X Tree survey data
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Citable Link
Published: 2005
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781841718774 (paperback)
- 9781407320472 (ebook)
BAR Number: B398