posted on 2018-07-25, 09:21authored byJose C. Carvajal López, Kirk Roberts, Laura Morabito, Gareth Rees, Frank Stremke, Anke Marsh, Robert Carter, Faisal Abdullah al-Naimi
This paper presents the main results of The Crowded Desert Project (TCD) survey during the 2017 season concerning the distribution, orientation, and strategic location of campsites in the area under study. After explaining the evidence recorded in the field, the article proposes an archaeological interpretation based on ethnographic models provided by Ferdinand (1993) and Montigny (1979; 1983; 1985), and on archaeological models advanced by Macumber (2016) and McPhillips, Rosendahl and Morgan (2015). Although ethnoarchaeology is criticized nowadays, it is suggested in this paper that a careful methodology built on the correlation of material evidence and relevant ethnographical data (e.g. Guérin 1994) can provide significant results to interpret the archaeological record of the area of study. The results provide interesting insights regarding the long-term continuity of the structural principles that guide the strategies of the design and location of nomadic campsites at least between AD 400–300 and the twentieth century.
Funding
This work was made possible by NPRP Grant 8-1582-
6-056 from the Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF),
a member of the Qatar Foundation.
History
Citation
Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 48 (2018): 31–45, 2018
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Archaeology and Ancient History
Source
Fifty-first meeting of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, British Museum, London
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 48 (2018): 31–45