id 11343 Url https://chloe.cnr.it/s/BiDiAr/item/11343 Resource template Conference Paper Resource class fabio:ConferencePaper Title A Contribution to the History of Seriation in Archaeology Creator Ihm, Peter Publisher Springer Date 2005 Language eng Abstract The honour to be the first who published the seriation of archaeological finds by formal methods is attributed by David Kendall (1964) to Sir W. M. Flinders Petrie (1899). According to Harold Driver (1965), an American anthropologist, the earliest numerical seriation studies are those of Kidder (1915), Kroeber (1916), and Spier (1917). It seems, however, that a general acceptance of formal seriation methods did not begin until the pioneering publications of Ford and Willey (1949) and G. W. Brainerd (1951) and W. S. Robinson (1951). Hole and Shaw published an algorithm for permutation search (1967), Elisséeff's (1965) and Goldmann's (1968) methods leading finally to correspondence analysis. Is Part Of Classification — the Ubiquitous Challenge. Proceedings of the 28th Annual Con- ference of the Gesellschaft für Klassifikation e.V. (Dortmund 2004) Spatial Coverage Berlin, Heidelberg Cited by 11073 Editor Weihs, Claus Gaul, Wolfgang Doi https://doi.otg/10.1007/3-540-28084-7_34 Isbn 978-3-540-28084-2 Pages 307-316 Homepage https://www.zotero.org/groups/5293298/bidiar/items/FJ4YWWKK/item-list --