Constructing the Sacred: Visibility and Ritual Landscape at the Egyptian Necropolis of SaqqaraMain MenuIntroductionSaqqara Through Space and TimeThe Hidden and the SeenWidening the ViewConstructing the Sacred at Royal Funerary Landscapes in EgyptMaking the ModelConclusion3D Model Downloads and Full Metadata & Paradata3D Model Documentation and Data CreditsBibliographyAuthor AcknowledgementsElaine A. Sullivan4a5e5cd7dceded4e422455506f842d2fcea8d597
Introduction: Note 97
12019-06-26T18:06:40+00:00Stanford University Pressaf84c3e11fe030c51c61bbd190fa82a3a1a1282413plainpublished2019-12-11T21:25:01+00:00Production Editore07a8e5cce7048990816a16af275e1003f3ffd5dGavin Lucas, The Archaeology of Time, Themes in Archaeology (London: Routledge, 2005), 40–41 discusses the importance of duration in archaeological chronology. He notes that, by emphasizing duration, we can better “understand the experience of change and temporality at any given moment by the inhabitants of a site, as it will be dependent on what aspects of their space or material world are changing. A whole complex of temporalities is potentially identifiable and one may get a richer sense of how the passage of time may have been perceived through the way different elements change at different rates or scales.”