why is excavation important to study history?
Answers
Answer:
Most important excavations are the result of a prepared plan—that is to say, their purpose is to locate buried evidence about an archaeological site. ... Emergency excavations then have to be mounted to rescue whatever knowledge of the past can be obtained before these remains are obliterated forever.
Explanation:
Answer:
Most important excavations are the result of a prepared plan—that is to say, their purpose is to locate buried evidence about an archaeological site. Emergency excavations then have to be mounted to rescue whatever knowledge of the past can be obtained before these remains are obliterated forever.
Many are project oriented, as, for example, when a scholar studying the life of the pre-Roman, Celtic-speaking Gauls of France may deliberately select a group of hill forts and excavate them, as Sir Mortimer Wheeler did in northwestern France in the years before the outbreak of World War II.
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