Nomads in Archaeology addresses the problem of how to study mobile
peoples using archaeological techniques. It therefore deals not only
with the prehistory and archaeology of nomads but also with current
issues in theory and methodology, particularly the concept of 'site
structure'. This is the first volume to be devoted exclusively to nomad
archaeology. It includes sections on the history and origins of pastoral
nomad societies, the economics of pastoralism, social organisation of
pastoral communities and the 'visibility threshold' of nomad material
culture. Examples and case studies are drawn from field work and
published sources primarily in Turkey and Iran.