1 - Introduction. Defining Experimental Archaeology: Making,
Understanding, Storytelling? - Aidan O’Sullivan and Christina
Souyoudzoglou-Haywood
Acknowledgement
2 - Experimental archaeological reconstructions and the
investigation of houses from the past - Aidan O’Sullivan and
Brendan O’Neill
3 - Crafting prehistoric bronze tools and weapons: Experimental and
experiential perspectives - Barry Molloy
4 - “Cutting edge technology”: new evidence from experimental
simulation and use of Late Bronze Age woodworking cutting tools.
The saw as ‘case study’ - Eleni Maragoudaki
5 - Experimenting on Mycenaean gold-working techniques: the case of
the granulated cone - Eleni Konstantinidi-Sybridi,
NikolasPapadimitriou, Akis Goumas, Anna Philippa-Touchais and
Romain Prévalet
6 - Thinking through our hands: making and understanding Minoan
female anthropomorphic figurines from the peak sanctuary of
Prinias, Crete. - Christine Morris, Brendan O’Neill and Alan
Peatfield
7 - Reconstructing a Bronze Age Kiln from PriniatikosPyrgos, Crete
- Jo Day and Maggie Kobik
8 - Where have all the moulds gone? A detailed investigation of
early medieval bi-valve clay moulds - Brendan O’Neill
9 - Recreating Neolithic textiles: an exercise on woven patterns -
Kalliope Sarri and Ulrikka Mokdad
10 - Experimental archaeology in the study of painting techniques
and materials - Antonis Vlavogilakis
Christina Souyoudzoglou-Haywood is Director of the Irish Institute
of Hellenic Studies at Athens (IIHSA) and Adjunct Lecturer at the
School of Classics, University College Dublin. For many years
Curator of the Classical Museum, UCD, she has published on its
history and contents as well as on Greek and Cypriot antiquities in
other Irish museum and university collections.
Aidan O'Sullivan is a Professor of Archaeology at University
College Dublin, Ireland. He is Director of the UCD Centre for
Experimental Archaeology and Material Culture and established the
School of Archaeology's MSc in Experimental Archaeology and
Material Culture in 2016.
'Experimental Archaeology: Making, Understanding, Story-telling
(2019) is a short edited volume that should be of interest to
students, archaeologists, and craftspeople who want to learn more
about the technical details of certain European Bronze Age
technologies derived through experimental archaeology.'
*Ethnoarchaeology*
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