Artikel
Open Access
Archaeological Responses to 5 Decades of Metal Detecting in Austria
-
Raimund Karl
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
5. Dezember 2016
Received: 2016-1-26
Accepted: 2016-11-26
Published Online: 2016-12-5
© 2016 Raimund Karl
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Interpretation at the Controller’s Edge: Designing Graphical User Interfaces for the Digital Publication of the Excavations at Gabii (Italy)
- Exploring the Utility of Bathymetry Maps Derived With Multispectral Satellite Observations in the Field of Underwater Archaeology
- Topical Issue on Bioarchaeology
- Essential Tensions: A Framework for Exploring Inequality Through Mortuary Archaeology and Bioarchaeology
- More Harm than Healing? Investigating the Iatrogenic Effects of Mercury Treatment on Acquired Syphilis in Post-medieval London.
- Topical Issue on Advances in Arctic Archaeology
- Instruments of Change: Late Dorset Palaeoeskimo Drums and Shamanism on Coastal Bylot Island, Nunavut, Canada
- Middle Dorset Communal Structures on Victoria Island
- From Science to Survival: Using Virtual Exhibits to Communicate the Significance of Polar Heritage Sites in the Canadian Arctic
- Manual Point Cloud Classification and Extraction for Hunter-Gatherer Feature Investigation: A Test Case From Two Low Arctic Paleo-Inuit Sites
- Re-Presenting the Past: A New Archaeological Outreach Strategy for the Canadian Territory of Nunavut
- Topical Issue on Aspects of Non-professional Metal Detecting in Europe
- “Professional Amateurs”. Metal Detecting and Metal Detectorists in Denmark
- Erratum to: “Professional Amateurs”. Metal Detecting and Metal Detectorists in Denmark
- Metal Detecting in Finland - An Ongoing Debate
- Lost in Translation: Discussing the Positive Contribution of Hobbyist Metal Detecting
- A Detectorist’s Utopia? Archaeology and Metal-Detecting in England and Wales
- The Future of Studying Hobbyist Metal Detecting in Europe: A Call for a Transnational Approach
- Rational Grounds for Dialogue Between Archaeologists and Metal Detectorists in Spain
- Private Metal Detecting and Archaeology in Norway
- Some Remarks on the Stormy Relationship Between the Detectorists and Archaeological Heritage in Poland
- “There Is None So Blind as Those Who Won‘t See”: Metal Detecting and Archaeology in France
- MEDEA: Crowd-Sourcing the Recording of Metal-Detected Artefacts in Flanders (Belgium)
- Archaeological Responses to 5 Decades of Metal Detecting in Austria
- Illegal Detectorism and Archaeological Heritage: Criminal and Administrative Punitive Systems in Spain
- Between Two Places: Archaeology and Metal-detecting in Europe
- Topical Issue on Understanding Diversity in Neolithic Houses and Households
- Being at Home in the Early Chalcolithic. The Longhouse Phenomenon in the Brześć Kujawski Culture in the Polish Lowlands
- From LBK to SBK: Pottery, Bones, Lithics and Houses at the Neolithic site of Hrdlovka, Czech Republic
- Household Scales: What Cooking Pots Can Tell Us About Households in the Late Neolithic Stavroupoli (Northern Greece)
- Houses, Households, Activity Zones in the Post-LBK World. Results of the Raw Material Analysis of the Chipped Stone Tools at Polgár- Csőszhalom, Northeast Hungary
- The Role of Sunken-Floored Buildings in LBK Farmstead
- Linear Pottery Houses and Their Inhabitants
- Between Cultic Fear and Lack of Wood
- At Home in the Neolithic: Understanding Diversity in Neolithic Houses and Households
Schlagwörter für diesen Artikel
Austria;
archaeology;
metal detecting;
heritage law;
Denkmalschutzgesetz
Creative Commons
BY-NC-ND 3.0
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Interpretation at the Controller’s Edge: Designing Graphical User Interfaces for the Digital Publication of the Excavations at Gabii (Italy)
- Exploring the Utility of Bathymetry Maps Derived With Multispectral Satellite Observations in the Field of Underwater Archaeology
- Topical Issue on Bioarchaeology
- Essential Tensions: A Framework for Exploring Inequality Through Mortuary Archaeology and Bioarchaeology
- More Harm than Healing? Investigating the Iatrogenic Effects of Mercury Treatment on Acquired Syphilis in Post-medieval London.
- Topical Issue on Advances in Arctic Archaeology
- Instruments of Change: Late Dorset Palaeoeskimo Drums and Shamanism on Coastal Bylot Island, Nunavut, Canada
- Middle Dorset Communal Structures on Victoria Island
- From Science to Survival: Using Virtual Exhibits to Communicate the Significance of Polar Heritage Sites in the Canadian Arctic
- Manual Point Cloud Classification and Extraction for Hunter-Gatherer Feature Investigation: A Test Case From Two Low Arctic Paleo-Inuit Sites
- Re-Presenting the Past: A New Archaeological Outreach Strategy for the Canadian Territory of Nunavut
- Topical Issue on Aspects of Non-professional Metal Detecting in Europe
- “Professional Amateurs”. Metal Detecting and Metal Detectorists in Denmark
- Erratum to: “Professional Amateurs”. Metal Detecting and Metal Detectorists in Denmark
- Metal Detecting in Finland - An Ongoing Debate
- Lost in Translation: Discussing the Positive Contribution of Hobbyist Metal Detecting
- A Detectorist’s Utopia? Archaeology and Metal-Detecting in England and Wales
- The Future of Studying Hobbyist Metal Detecting in Europe: A Call for a Transnational Approach
- Rational Grounds for Dialogue Between Archaeologists and Metal Detectorists in Spain
- Private Metal Detecting and Archaeology in Norway
- Some Remarks on the Stormy Relationship Between the Detectorists and Archaeological Heritage in Poland
- “There Is None So Blind as Those Who Won‘t See”: Metal Detecting and Archaeology in France
- MEDEA: Crowd-Sourcing the Recording of Metal-Detected Artefacts in Flanders (Belgium)
- Archaeological Responses to 5 Decades of Metal Detecting in Austria
- Illegal Detectorism and Archaeological Heritage: Criminal and Administrative Punitive Systems in Spain
- Between Two Places: Archaeology and Metal-detecting in Europe
- Topical Issue on Understanding Diversity in Neolithic Houses and Households
- Being at Home in the Early Chalcolithic. The Longhouse Phenomenon in the Brześć Kujawski Culture in the Polish Lowlands
- From LBK to SBK: Pottery, Bones, Lithics and Houses at the Neolithic site of Hrdlovka, Czech Republic
- Household Scales: What Cooking Pots Can Tell Us About Households in the Late Neolithic Stavroupoli (Northern Greece)
- Houses, Households, Activity Zones in the Post-LBK World. Results of the Raw Material Analysis of the Chipped Stone Tools at Polgár- Csőszhalom, Northeast Hungary
- The Role of Sunken-Floored Buildings in LBK Farmstead
- Linear Pottery Houses and Their Inhabitants
- Between Cultic Fear and Lack of Wood
- At Home in the Neolithic: Understanding Diversity in Neolithic Houses and Households