Experimental Archaeology is a volume which aims to bridge the gap in
archaeology between empirical testing and humanistic approaches to
understanding the material record. The contributors explore a wide
variety of different fields including how a phenomenological methodology
can be used to increase our understanding of how a Bronze Age temple was
'experienced' by people in the past; how experimentation in the
production of materials such as rawhide, glass and wine-making can be
used to test theories or written sources and the possibilities of
studying the three-dimensional morphology of Acheulian handaxes to
search for possible idiosyncratic indicators during the Lower
Palaeolithic. The papers in the volume reflect the continued diversity
of work that experimental archaeology is able to produce and show how
experimentation can be integrated with theory to substantiate a variety
of hypotheses, whether validating information from written sources or
testing the inferences of more recent theoretical ideology. Experimental
Archaeology will set a new precedent for the role of experimentation in
future archaeological research.