会员   密码 您忘记密码了吗?
1,565,873 本书已上架      购物流程 | 常见问题 | 联系我们 | 关于我们 | 用户协议

有店 App


当前分类

浏览历史

当前位置: 首页 > 人文史地 > 中国史地 > Piecing Together Sha Po:Archaeological Investigations and Landscape Reconstruction
Piecing Together Sha Po:Archaeological Investigations and Landscape Reconstruction
上一张
Piecing Together Sha Po:Archaeological Investigations and Landscape Reconstruction
下一张
prev next

Piecing Together Sha Po:Archaeological Investigations and Landscape Reconstruction

作者: Mick Atha,Kennis Yip
出版社: 香港大學出版社
出版日期: 2016-12-16
商品库存: 点击查询库存
以上库存为海外库存属流动性。
可选择“空运”或“海运”配送,空运费每件商品是RM14。
配送时间:空运约8~12个工作天,海运约30个工作天。
(以上预计配送时间不包括出版社库存不足需调货及尚未出版的新品)
市场价格: RM312.60
本店售价: RM275.10
用户评价: comment rank 5
购买数量:
collect Add to cart Add booking
详细介绍 商品属性 商品标记
內容簡介

  Hong Kong boasts a number of rich archaeological sites behind sandy bays. Among these backbeaches is Sha Po on Lamma Island, a site which has long captured the attention of archaeologists. However, until now no comprehensive study of the area has ever been published.

  Piecing Together Sha Po presents the first sustained analysis, framed in terms of a multi-period social landscape, of the varieties of human activity in Sha Po spanning more than 6,000 years. Synthesising decades of earlier fieldwork together with Atha and Yip’s own extensive excavations conducted in 2008–2010, the discoveries collectively enabled the authors to reconstruct the society in Sha Po in different historical periods.

  The artefacts unearthed from the site—some of them unique to the region—reveal a vibrant past which saw the inhabitants of Sha Po interacting with the environment in diverse ways. Evidence showing the mastery of quartz ornament manufacture and metallurgy in the Bronze Age suggests increasing craft specialisation and the rise of a more complex, competitive society. Later on, during the Six Dynasties–Tang period, Sha Po turned into a centre in the region’s imperially controlled kiln-based salt industry. Closer to our time, in the nineteenth century the farming and fishing communities in Sha Po became important suppliers of food and fuel to urban Hong Kong. Ultimately, this ground-breaking work tells a compelling story about human beings’ ceaseless reinvention of their lives through the lens of one special archaeological site.


作者介紹

作者簡介

Mick Atha


  Mick Atha teaches archaeology and landscape studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Kennis Yip is an archaeological consultant. They are married with a daughter and live near Sha Po on Lamma Island.


目錄