Avebury is one of the few places in southern Britain to have acted as a
focus for ceremonial and ritual activity during the Neolithic and early
Bronze Age. The rich collection of archaeological sites, some visible
and some buried, exerted physical and cultural influence on the
landscape and environment for millennia. This volume forms the first
formal research agenda for a World Heritage Site and is the result of
several years' work by leading specialists. An introductory discussion
of the specific research requirements of such an extraordinary site is
followed by a Resource Assessment, a Research Agenda and a study of
Research Strategies. These sections are arranged chronologically and
cover the Palaeolithic through to the Saxon and medieval periods. The
final section examines the methods and techniques used to gather data.
These include geophysical survey, fieldwalking, aerial survey,
evaluation and excavation, GIS survey and metal detecting. Contributors
include Andrew J Lawson, Rosemary M J Cleal, Bryn Walters, Andrew
Reynolds, Chris Gingell, Mark Corney, Gill Swanton, Peter Fowler,
Michael J Allen, Mark Bowden and Nick Burton.