The authors in this volume focus on understanding individual trajectories and the historically contingent relationships between the social, the economic, the political and the sacred as reflected regionally. Among topics considered are the social construction of landscape; use of spatial patterning to interpret social variability; paleoenvironmental reconstruction and human impacts; and social memory and social practice. This book opens a discourse around the spatial patterning of the contingent, recursive relationships between people, their social activities and the environment.
Roderick B. Salisbury is an IGERT Fellow in GI Science at the University at Buffalo in NY and an Honorary Visiting Fellow at the School of Archaeology and Ancient History at the University of Leicester, UK. His research focuses on Late Neolithic communities, social practices and soil in the Carpathian Basin. He is the co-editor of Space—Archaeology’s Final Frontier? An Intercontinental Approach, published by CSP in 2007.