{
    "o:id": 13423,
    "url": "https://chloe.cnr.it/s/BiDiAr/item/13423",
    "o:resource_template": "Academic Article",
    "o:resource_class": "bibo:AcademicArticle",
    "dcterms:title": [
        "Capta and Data: On the True Nature of Archaeological Information"
    ],
    "dcterms:creator": [
        "Chippindale, Christopher"
    ],
    "dcterms:date": [
        "2000"
    ],
    "dcterms:language": [
        "eng"
    ],
    "dcterms:abstract": [
        "Is the customary word \"data\" a good name for archaeological records and facts? \"Data\" means the things that are \"given,\" but archaeological observations and facts are never given at all. Rather, they are captured by the researcher, who seeks to grasp from the material record the essentials of some complex and little-known phenomenon, often remote in time and usually ambiguous in material expression. We should prefer to use the better word \"capta,\" the things that have been captured, and to realize that this word captures the essence of what we do."
    ],
    "dcterms:isPartOf": [
        "American Antiquity"
    ],
    "bibo:doi": [
        "https://doi.org/10.2307/2694418"
    ],
    "bibo:issn": [
        "0002-7316"
    ],
    "bibo:issue": [
        "4"
    ],
    "bibo:pages": [
        "605-612"
    ],
    "bibo:shortTitle": [
        "Capta and Data"
    ],
    "bibo:uri": [
        "https://www.jstor.org/stable/2694418"
    ],
    "bibo:volume": [
        "65"
    ],
    "foaf:homepage": [
        "https://www.zotero.org/groups/5293298/bidiar/items/XPG42G6L/item-list"
    ]
},
