© EXARC, 2012; ISSN: 2212-8956; Publishing date: May 15, 2012
The EXARC Journal consists of Reviewed articles and unreviewed Mixed Matters contributions.
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EXARC Journal Issue 2012/2
Reviewed Articles
The Use of Metal Moulds to Cast Lead Weights onto the Wooden Shaft of a Plumbata
Plumbata - Plural plumbatae. a projectile weapon used during the latter part of the Roman period – a fletched dart. They usually consisted of a barbed iron head with a lead weight fitted to a fletched wooden shaft. Plumbatae have been found on several sites in Britain and abroad and written evidence for their existence has been reported in the fourth century by Vegitius...
An Iron Age Horse Bridle Reconstructed: Design, Action and Usability
As a part of my master thesis on Iron Age horse gear and horse skeletal remains from Northern Norway, the results from this reconstruction project made an important contribution to the understanding and analysis of the archaeological material...
Public Outreach in the Drents Museum in Assen (NL)
Part of my job as museum teacher at the Drents Museum in Assen is attending to the all the groups that visit our museum. This includes the great number of children, both elementary school and high school students, that visit our museum. A lot of children think of a museum as a boring place where there is nothing to do but look at old paintings...
International Learning Partnership: Living History and Adult Education in the Museum
Many archaeological open-air museums and museums with indoor reconstructions choose to interpret history using the method of ‘living history’, or re-enactments. If one only counts the German references, there is wide variety of terms used by museums when they talk of ‘living history’...
Archaeological Open-Air Museums in the Netherlands, a Bit of History
This article is a result of my interest in, and experience with, archaeological open-air museums. With the start of HOME Eindhoven in 1982, I became actively involved in these museums and I was one of the people involved from the first moment in EXARC. From 2005 onward, I have been conducting postgraduate research at the University of Exeter into archaeological open-air museums...
Probable Measure Estimating Tool Employed by the Aeneolithic Potters
The article proposes that an item, ornamented with a geometric pattern with inscribed diagonal cross and attributed to the Afanasievo culture (Aeneolithic, South Siberia), represents a primitive tool reflecting practical knowledge of basic geometry by the ancient potters. The article suggests an experimental reconstruction method for crafting the proposed instrument, and...