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Exploring Smaller Settlements of the Great Zimbabwe Tradition, Buhera Region, Zimbabwe

Lindahl, Anders LU (2003) Urban Landscape Dynamics and Resource use: An international symposium on multidisciplinary cooperation
Abstract
Most work on the Great Zimbabwe tradition has focused on Great Zimbabwe itself and its major successor settlements. Smaller, contemporary stonewalled sites, some hundreds of kilometres from Great Zimbabwe, have been only mapped in most cases. Our goal has been to begin to explore both the homesteads within stone-enclosures at smaller Great Zimbabwe-tradition sites, and to seek out homesteads lying outside the small stone enclosures. In this paper I discuss ongoing excavations at two Great Zimbabwe-tradition sites, Kagumbudzi and Muchuchu, and survey including shovel-test pits and phosphate analyses. This initiative has begun to allow smaller stone sites and their outlying components, as well as the possible interactions between them, to... (More)
Most work on the Great Zimbabwe tradition has focused on Great Zimbabwe itself and its major successor settlements. Smaller, contemporary stonewalled sites, some hundreds of kilometres from Great Zimbabwe, have been only mapped in most cases. Our goal has been to begin to explore both the homesteads within stone-enclosures at smaller Great Zimbabwe-tradition sites, and to seek out homesteads lying outside the small stone enclosures. In this paper I discuss ongoing excavations at two Great Zimbabwe-tradition sites, Kagumbudzi and Muchuchu, and survey including shovel-test pits and phosphate analyses. This initiative has begun to allow smaller stone sites and their outlying components, as well as the possible interactions between them, to emerge and be included in an understanding of the Great Zimbabwe tradition. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
survey, Muchuchu, Great Zimbabwe, Kagumbudzi
pages
8 pages
conference name
Urban Landscape Dynamics and Resource use: An international symposium on multidisciplinary cooperation
conference dates
2003-08-28 - 2003-08-30
project
Cermics, Metal craft and Settlement in South eastern Zimbabwe since ca 1400 AD
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c95c5833-612c-4b52-8037-7ff23ea9fcc5 (old id 627823)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 14:11:51
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:18:51
@misc{c95c5833-612c-4b52-8037-7ff23ea9fcc5,
  abstract     = {{Most work on the Great Zimbabwe tradition has focused on Great Zimbabwe itself and its major successor settlements. Smaller, contemporary stonewalled sites, some hundreds of kilometres from Great Zimbabwe, have been only mapped in most cases. Our goal has been to begin to explore both the homesteads within stone-enclosures at smaller Great Zimbabwe-tradition sites, and to seek out homesteads lying outside the small stone enclosures. In this paper I discuss ongoing excavations at two Great Zimbabwe-tradition sites, Kagumbudzi and Muchuchu, and survey including shovel-test pits and phosphate analyses. This initiative has begun to allow smaller stone sites and their outlying components, as well as the possible interactions between them, to emerge and be included in an understanding of the Great Zimbabwe tradition.}},
  author       = {{Lindahl, Anders}},
  keywords     = {{survey; Muchuchu; Great Zimbabwe; Kagumbudzi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Exploring Smaller Settlements of the Great Zimbabwe Tradition, Buhera Region, Zimbabwe}},
  year         = {{2003}},
}