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" Geophysical Survey at Kilwa Kisiwani, Tanzania "
Jeffrey Fleisher, Stephanie Wynne-Jones, Charlene Steele, et al.
Document Type
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AL
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Record Number
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1069853
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Doc. No
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LA113482
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Call No
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10.3213/2191-5784-10220
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Language of Document
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English
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Main Entry
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Charlene Steele
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Jeffrey Fleisher
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Kate Welham
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Stephanie Wynne-Jones
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Title & Author
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Geophysical Survey at Kilwa Kisiwani, Tanzania [Article]\ Jeffrey Fleisher, Stephanie Wynne-Jones, Charlene Steele, et al.
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Publication Statement
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Leiden: Brill
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Title of Periodical
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Journal of African Archaeology
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Date
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2012
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Volume/ Issue Number
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10/2
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Page No
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207–220
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Abstract
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Geophysical survey at Kilwa Kisiwani, southern Tanzania, has recovered evidence for several aspects of town layout and the use of space within the town that enhance our understandings of this important Swahili site. Although excavations in the 1960s recovered substantial monuments at this stonetown and traced a chronology for the development of the site from the eighth to the sixteenth centuries AD, the overall site layout has remained poorly understood. This paper outlines the possibilities that geophysics creates for positioning the excavations within a broader urban landscape, and reports on a preliminary season of survey at Kilwa. Two areas were the focus of fieldwork during 2011. First the main town centre was surveyed, and the results suggest a denser town plan of coral-built houses that have subsequently been robbed. Second, the enigmatic enclosure of Husuni Ndogo was explored, and revealed evidence for activity relating to metalworking in this monumental space. Geophysical survey at Kilwa Kisiwani, southern Tanzania, has recovered evidence for several aspects of town layout and the use of space within the town that enhance our understandings of this important Swahili site. Although excavations in the 1960s recovered substantial monuments at this stonetown and traced a chronology for the development of the site from the eighth to the sixteenth centuries AD, the overall site layout has remained poorly understood. This paper outlines the possibilities that geophysics creates for positioning the excavations within a broader urban landscape, and reports on a preliminary season of survey at Kilwa. Two areas were the focus of fieldwork during 2011. First the main town centre was surveyed, and the results suggest a denser town plan of coral-built houses that have subsequently been robbed. Second, the enigmatic enclosure of Husuni Ndogo was explored, and revealed evidence for activity relating to metalworking in this monumental space.
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Descriptor
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coral architecture
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Descriptor
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Kilwa Kisiwani
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Descriptor
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Magnetometry
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Descriptor
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spatial organization
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Descriptor
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Swahili
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Descriptor
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urban space
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Location & Call number
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10.3213/2191-5784-10220
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