Department of Archaeology

Teaching support

Bibliographies

These should follow a consistent style which should be followed also at the time of collection of data. The bibliography should be checked for completeness and redundancy.

One accepted bibliographic scheme is that of Antiquity (Notes for contributors):

For a journal article:

Randsborg, K. 1990. Between Classical antiquity and the Middle Ages: New evidence of economic change, Antiquity 64: 122–7.

For a book or monograph:

Hodder, I. 1990. The domestication of Europe. Structure and contingency in Neolithic Societies. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

For a paper in a book or monograph:

Halstead, P. & J. O'Shea. 1982. A friend in need is a friend indeed: Social storage and the origins of social ranking, in C. Renfrew & S. Shennan (ed.), Ranking, resource and exchange. Aspects of the archaeology of early European society: 92–9. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

For an unpublished work:

Saxe, A.A. 1970. The social dimensions of mortuary practice. Unpublished PhD thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan.

If you cite two or more articles from the same book/monograph, make the book itself a separate entry and cross-reference to it:

Hope, G. & P.J. Hughes. 1985. Geomorphic fieldwork and the evolution of the landscape of Kakadu National Park, in Jones (ed.): 220–40.

Jones, R. (ed.). 1985. Archaeological research in Kakadu National Park. Canberra: Australian National Parks and Wildlife Department. Special Publication 13.

Jones, R. & I. Johnson. 1985. Deaf Adder Gorge: Lindner Site, Nauwalabila I, in Jones (ed.): 165–218.

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