Direct Historical Approach

The direct historical approach was an archaeological and anthropological technique invented by the American scholar William Duncan Strong during the 1920s and 1930s. Strong argued that he could extrapolate backwards in time from known historical periods into prehistory. By studying a site with known historical occupations and then excavating it to establish prehistoric activity, he reasoned that by using analogy and homology based on the historical data, he could theorise about the past society that had used the site long before the historical records were made. The approach works well where continuity can be demonstrated but is less useful in regions where significant differences between prehistoric and historic societies are known.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
franois joseph bosio
cd36
anthem (insurance)
forbidden forest (movie)
dideric cuckoo
warfhuizen
knurling
u.s. social policy
muhammad abduh
sida
eia 708
amy ridenour
list of native american artists
sartor resartus
muhammad abdullah
william duncan strong
iorwith wilbur abel
hen and chicks
john jacob abel
chris reifert
othenio abel
george abernethy
antonio abetti
fanny abington
tamp
arthur, king of time and space
wanna be a vj
aiswarya
d. michael fisher
graham spanier
kindred
suzuki vx 800
portafilter
rotary converter
homology (anthropology)
kalpana
jesse camp
denise faustman
viewfinder
dave holmes
taffel
antiparos
shaaron claridge
vic mizzy