Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2015
1 The committee of independent advisors have deemed the Treasure to be worth £3.285 million. This figure will be split equally between the finder (Terry Herbert) and the landowner (Fred Johnson). The hoard is summarised at www.staffordshirehoard.org.uk.
2 [email protected]. My grateful thanks to Immo for information about his researches.
3 Antiquity 84: 175-84.
4 Karen Milek of Aberdeen University undertook a major review incorporating new work in Iceland in her Cambridge University dissertation. See Milek, K.B. 2006. Houses and households in early Icelandic society: geoarchaeology and the interpretation of social space. Unpublished PhD dissertation, University of Cambridge.
5 Hjulstro, B. & Isaksson, S.. 2009 Identification of activity area signatures in a reconstructed Iron Age house by combining element and lipid analyses of sediments. Journal of Archaeological Science 36 (2009): 174-83CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 Herries, A.I R. 2009 New approaches for integrating palaeomagnetic and mineral magnetic methods to answer archaeological and geological questions on Stone Age sites, in Fairbairn, A., O'Connor, S. & Marwick, B. (ed.) New directions in archaeological science (Terra Australis 28): 235-54.Google Scholar