McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research in the University of Cambridge was established in 1990. The Institute publishes the Cambridge Archaeological Journal three times a year, as well as the McDonald Institute Monograph Series which includes major fieldwork reports and conference volumes. In addition, the Institute publishes a smaller-format paperback series as part of the Prehistory of Languages project.

Archaeological investigations in the Niah Caves, Sarawak, 1954-2004 Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 592
ISBN: 9781902937601
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2016
Series: McDonald Institute Monographs
Description:
This book is the companion volume to Rainforest Foraging and Farming in Island Southeast Asia: the Archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak. Together they present the results of new fieldwork in the caves and new studies of finds from earlier excavations, a project that has involved a team of over 70 archaeologists and geographers. Rainforest Foraging and Farming told the story of human activity in the caves over the past 50,000 years and how that story throws light on the history of our species in Island Southeast Asia from the time when modern humans first arrived to recent centuries.
RRP: £65.00
The Provincial Archaeology of the Assyrian Empire Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 408
ISBN: 9781902937748
Pub Date: 13 Jun 2016
Description:
The Assyrian empire was in its day the greatest empire the world had ever seen. Building on the expansion of the Middle Assyrian state in the late second millennium BC, the opening centuries of the first millennium witnessed a resurgence which led to the birth of a true empire whose limits stretched from Egypt to Iran and from Anatolia to the Persian Gulf. While the Assyrian imperial capital cities have long been the focus of archaeological exploration, it is only in recent decades that the peripheral areas have been the subject of sustained research.
RRP: £80.00
Twice-crossed River Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 680
ISBN: 9781902937755
Pub Date: 13 Jun 2016
Series: The Archaeology of the Lower Ouse Valley
Description:
This is the first volume charting the CAU’s on-going Barleycroft Farm/Over investigations, which now encompasses almost twenty years of fieldwork across both banks of the River Great Ouse at its junction with the Fen. Amongst the project’s main directives is the status of a major river in prehistory – when a communication corridor and when a divide? Accordingly, a key component throughout has been the documentation of the lower Ouse’s complex palaeoenvironmental history, and a delta-like wet landscape dotted with mid-stream islands has been mapped.
RRP: £40.00
Kavos and the Special Deposits Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 614
ISBN: 9781902937700
Pub Date: 22 Feb 2016
Series: The Sanctuary on Keros and the Origins of Aegean Ritual Practice
Description:
Volume II describes the excavation and finds from the Special Deposits at Kavos at the sanctuary on Keros lying opposite the settlement on the islet of Dhaskalio (described in Volume I). The finds of marble from the Special Deposit South are described in Volume III, and the pottery in Volume V. The sanctuary at Kavos, dating from c.
RRP: £64.00
Preludes to Urbanism Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 196
ISBN: 9781902937656
Pub Date: 07 May 2015
Series: McDonald Institute Monographs
Description:
This volume explores early complex society and nascent urbanism, based in studies of Mesopotamia during the fifth–fourth millennia bc. Urbanism in the Near East has traditionally been located in late fourthmillennium bc southern Mesopotamia (south Iraq); but recent excavations and surveys in northeast Syria and southeast Turkey have identified a distinctively northern Mesopotamian variant of this development, which can be dated to the early fourth millennium bc. The authors use multiscalar approaches, including material culturebased studies, settlement archaeology and regional surveys, to achieve an understanding of the dynamics of early urbanism across this key region.
RRP: £30.00
Living in the Landscape Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 380
ISBN: 9781902937731
Pub Date: 17 Nov 2014
Description:
This edited volume reflects on the multitude of ways by which humans shape and are shaped by the natural world, and how Archaeology and its cognate disciplines recover this relationship. The structure and content of the book recognize Graeme Barker’s pioneering contribution to the scientific study of human–environment interaction, and form a secondary dialectic between his many colleagues and past students and the academic vista which he has helped define. The volume comprises 22 thematic papers, arranged chronologically, each a presentation of front-line research in their respective fields.
RRP: £48.00
Rainforest Foraging and Farming in Island Southeast Asia Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 464
ISBN: 9781902937540
Pub Date: 31 Oct 2013
Description:
The cathedral-like Niah Caves of Sarawak (Borneo) have iconic status in the archaeology of Southeast Asia, due to the excavations by Tom and Barbara Harrisson in the 1950s and 1960s which revealed the longest sequence of human occupation in the region, from (we now know) 50,000 years ago to the recent past. This book is the first of two volumes describing the results of new work in the caves by a multi-disciplinary team of archaeologists and geographers aimed at clarifying the many questions raised by the earlier work. This volume is a closely integrated account of how the old and new work combines to provide profound new insights into the prehistory of the region: the strategies developed by our species to live in rainforests from the time of first arrival; how rainforest foragers engaged in forms of ‘vegeculture’ thousands of years before rice farming; and how rice farming represented profound transformations in the social (and spiritual?
RRP: £62.00
The Settlement at Dhaskalio Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 832
ISBN: 9781902937649
Pub Date: 21 Oct 2013
Series: The Sanctuary on Keros and the Origins of Aegean Ritual Practice
Description:
The Settlement at Dhaskalio is the first volume in the series The Sanctuary on Keros: Excavations at Dhaskalio and Dhaskalio Kavos, 2006-2008, edited by Colin Renfrew, Olga Philaniotou, Neil Brodie, Giorgos Gavalas and Michael Boyd. Here the findings are presented from the well-stratified settlement of Dhaskalio, today an islet near the Cycladic island of Keros, Greece. A series of radiocarbon dates situates the duration of the settlement from around 2750 to 2300 BC.
RRP: £80.00
Spong Hill IX: Chronology and Synthesis Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 424
ISBN: 9781902937625
Pub Date: 31 Aug 2013
Series: McDonald Institute Monographs
Illustrations: Illus.
Description:
Spong Hill, with over 2500 cremations, remains the largest early Anglo-Saxon cremation cemetery to have been excavated in Britain. This volume presents the long-awaited chronology and synthesis of the site. It gives a detailed overview of the artefactual evidence, which includes over 1200 objects of bone, antler and ivory.
Bones for Tools - Tools for Bones Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 164
ISBN: 9781902937595
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2012
Illustrations: 99 b/w figs, 26 tables
Description:
Animal procurement and tool production form two of the most tightly connected components of human behaviour. They are tied to our emergence as a genus, were fundamental to the dispersal of our species, and underpin the development of our societies. The interaction between these fundamental activities has been a subject of archaeological inference from the earliest days of the discipline, yet the pursuit of each has tended to encourage and entrench specialist study.
RRP: £45.00
Being an Islander Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 358
ISBN: 9781902937618
Pub Date: 01 Oct 2012
Series: McDonald Institute Monographs
Illustrations: Illus.
Description:
Quoygrew - a settlement of farmers and fishers on the island of Westray in Orkney - was continuously occupied from the tenth century until 1937. Focusing on the archaeology of its first 700 years, this volume explores how 'small worlds' both reflected and impacted the fundamental pan-European watersheds of the Middle Ages: the growth of population, economic production and trade from the tenth to the thirteenth centuries and the subsequent economic and demographic retrenchment of the fourteenth to fifteenth centuries. Concurrently, it addresses the nature of island societies, with distinctive identities shaped by the interplay of isolation and interconnectedness.
RRP: £56.00
Why cultivate? Anthropological and Archaeological Approaches to Foraging-Farming Transitions in Southeast Asia Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 142
ISBN: 9781902937588
Pub Date: 25 May 2011
Description:
Does it make sense to understand the prehistory, history and present-day patterns of life in Southeast Asia in terms of a distinction between two ways of life: "farming" and "foraging"? This is the central question addressed by the anthropologists and archaeologists contributing to this volume. Inherent within the question "Why Cultivate?
RRP: £35.00
The Upper Palaeolithic Revolution in global perspective Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 177
ISBN: 9781902937533
Pub Date: 29 Nov 2010
Illustrations: b/w illus
Description:
The Palaeolithic is the only period in archaeology that can be studied globally. In the last half century one prehistorian, Sir Paul Mellars, has changed the shape and direction of such studies, adding immeasurably to what we know about humanity's earliest origins and the timing of crucial transitions in the journey. The Upper Palaeolithic Revolution in global perspective is a collection of essays in his honour.
RRP: £45.00
Grounding Knowledge/Walking Land Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 223
ISBN: 9781902937502
Pub Date: 10 May 2009
Description:
This volume documents almost a decade of groundbreaking investigations within the Annapurna highlands of Nepal, including survey recording of fort and settlement sites. From the outset, the project's focus was the extraordinary ruins of Kohla Sombre – Kohla, The Three Villages – the ancestral settlement of the Tami-mai (Gurung) community, who hosted and instigated the fieldwork programme. Ultimately, only a single season's excavation was conducted before the project was cut short by the political insurgency within the country.
RRP: £40.00
Simulations, Genetics and Human Prehistory Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 208
ISBN: 9781902937458
Pub Date: 31 Jul 2008
Series: McDonald Institute Monographs
Description:
Data from molecular genetics have changed our views on the origin, spread and timescale of our species across this planet. But how can we reveal more detail about the demography of ancient human populations? For example, is it possible to determine when and how many people arrived at a certain continent, and which route they took from a choice of geographically plausible options?
RRP: £25.00
Horizon Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 540
ISBN: 9781902937366
Pub Date: 30 Apr 2008
Series: McDonald Institute Monographs
Illustrations: 471 b/w and 60 col illus
Description:
The Cycladic Islands of Greece played a central role in Aegean prehistory, and many new discoveries have been made in recent years at sites ranging in date from the Mesolithic period to the end of the Bronze Age. In the well-illustrated chapters of this book, based on the recent conference held at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research in Cambridge, international scholars including leading Greek archaeologists offer new information about recent developments, many arising from hitherto unpublished excavations. The book contains novel theoretical insights into the workings of culture process in the prehistoric cultures of the islands.
RRP: £65.00