We have provided the selection of example archaeology dissertation topics below to help and inspire you.
An analysis of the view of Jacobs (1969, p. 16) that ‘the separation commonly made, dividing the city’s commerce and industry from rural agriculture, is artificial and imaginary’, with reference to Çatal Hüyük.
The site of Çatal Hüyük, a Neolithic and Chalcolithic settlement in Anatolia, was first excavated in 1958 by the late Sir James Mellaart, who also led subsequent excavations between 1961 and 1965. However, the site thereafter lay undisturbed for 30 years as a consequence of the Dorak affair, when he was accused of antiquities smuggling by the Turkish authorities. Nevertheless, during the period of his excavations, evidence had emerged that the area was at the centre of an advanced network of cultures and trade. Building upon such academic opinions and enthused by a personal interest in the area (as a consequence of repeated visits) this is a dissertation that combines practical archaeology with existing learned experience.
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The African Burial Ground – an archaeological and cultural rejoinder
Located in Lower Manhattan, the aforementioned site has been found to contain the (intact) remains of 400 men as well as those of women and children. Despite initial beliefs that the site had also been home to mass burials, no such evidence was found. This dissertation assesses the impact of the opening of a visitor centre and the decreeing of the site as the 123rd National Monument. In so doing the role that archaeology has had are assessed, through the finding of the site, in reshaping previous preconceptions of black Afro-American history in the New York district as well as issues relating to ‘reclaiming our history’ within the Afro-American New York community.
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Sutton Hoo revisited – a comparative study with Swedish burial grounds.
Discovered in 1939, the ship-burial and associated graves at Sutton Hoo unearthed the richest early medieval burial site in England. Its importance as an archaeological site is thus unquestioned for the understanding that it has given to the reign and times of Raedwald. This dissertation takes a more international view of the importance of Sutton Hoo and accordingly compares the finds at Sutton Hoo with those unearthed in Vendel and Vasgard, in Sweden. In so doing this dissertation is particularly interested in what the similarity of artefacts can tell both archaeologists and historians as to the nature of sea-trading patterns in the sixth and seventh centuries (as documented by Bede) as well as the importance, within Swedish noble culture of the time of sending children away from home to be raised and tutored by relatives abroad.
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Archaeological digs at Norwich Cathedral 1987-88 and 2001-2007: A review.
Though the second city of England until c.1850, Norwich is now, in many ways, a forgotten backwater. Its cathedral, however, was at the height of the city’s power, surrounded by a mediaeval city that boasted a church for every week of the year. The moving of the Choir School, the rebuilding of the Refectory, and the construction of the Hostry on the site of the mediaeval hostry, over the years 2004-2007, resulted in the largest archaeological dig in and around Norwich Cathedral since the excavation of the north-side of the Cathedral in 1987 – 1988 and the building of the Allisonium. Reviewing the techniques and the discoveries found in both digs this dissertation not only comments on the primary findings but also interviews those who were involved in the digs at one of England’s greatest cathedrals. It also comments on what the results of both digs can tell contemporary archaeologists as to the attitudes and priorities of earlier archaeologists, given the repairs to these sections of the Cathedral that were previously carried out in both the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
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Canal archaeology: A modern day archaeological gem waiting to be discovered.
The canals and inland waterways of England and Wales are now busier than ever before, though the traffic now using them is primarily holiday-orientated, rather than freight. In looking at the opportunities that canals give to archaeologists interested in the modern industrial period, this dissertation gives especial focus to the programmes of restoration embarked by the Cotswold Canals Trust (the Stroudwater Navigation and the Thames and Severn Canal). This is a dissertation that benefits not only from a range of secondary sources upon the manner in which the canal fell into disrepair and eventual closure but also primary research from the perspectives of contemporary workers in the canal system, and their finds.
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The conservation of archaeologically recovered synthetic carpet.
The difficulties faced by archaeologists when conserving wet-site artefacts is well known; particularly with regard to wood and there is a wealth of literature on the use of colophony rosin, polyethylene glycol and acetone in such work. Recent research has also been undertaken on the best ways to preserve wet-site archaeologically recovered synthetic carpet. Using such studies as base points, this dissertation undertakes a number of laboratory based experiments that seek to provide a comparative answer as to the best way to preserve water-logged man-made synthetic carpet and in so doing records the success and failures of adopting techniques such as dehydration, and freeze drying.
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What now for a Leicester car park? An analysis of the potential site-legacies of the discovery of the body of Richard III.
The discovery of that which is believed to be the body of Richard III in a council car park in central Leicester is, this thesis contends, one of the most exciting and important archaeological finds within England in the past decade. Given that the modern day car park appears to be the final resting place of an anointed King this dissertation asks what should happen next to the site – once the archaeological dig is fully over. In so doing it evaluates whether the site should be refilled (as is now usually the case within inner-city sites once the dig is over) or preserved as not only a ‘window on the past’ but also as a location by which to highlight the role of 21st century archaeology.
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Landscape archaeology: The legacy of W.G. Hoskins.
In 1955 Hoskins published his seminal work The Making of the English Landscape which recognised the importance of field archaeology to the production of landscape history. Hoskins would subsequently found the Leicester School. This dissertation surveys the career of Hoskins not as a local historian but as a pioneer of historic landscape archaeology and in so doing evaluates the extent to which the different thematic approaches adopted in landscape archaeology result in it being a distinct discipline in its own right.
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Community-based archaeological digs: Is archaeology the province of the wider community, or a peculiar specialism?
The October 2012 archaeological dig at Great Chilton, Durham has unearthed interesting finds including a quern and evidence of several roundhouses, suggesting that the site could date back to 500BC. It is an example of a community-dig in which archaeological experts and students have been joined by local community volunteers. Whilst noting that such community involvement may help to fund research and raise the profile of archaeology, this dissertation questions whether it is either appropriate or desirable (given the nature of potential artefacts) for non-professional archaeologists (or those from associated disciplines) to take part in the actually digging and recovery processes involved in archaeological digs and asks whether the trade-off between funding and widening-participation with potential site contamination is a price that the discipline should be expected to pay.
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From Animal, Vegetable, Mineral to TimeTeam: The changing nature of archaeology on television.
Broadcast from 1952 to 1959, Animal, Vegetable, Mineral was an archaeology quiz show on British television in which a panel of experts was presented with artefacts that they needed to identify and comment upon. Thereafter, archaeological programmes such as Chronicle were broadcast until 1991. In 1994, TimeTeam burst onto the nation’s television screens. It has now been shown on Channel 4 for eighteen series and, with its combination of ‘geo-phys’, tractor-dug trenches and cheery lead presenter (Tony Robinson), it continues to popularise archaeology in a manner that combines education with entertainment. This paper explores the value of archaeological programmes on television and evaluates whether the profession is enhanced by such popular programming.
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