This volume of Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia focuses on how local communities in prehistory define themselves in relation to a bigger social world. 
 Communities from the deep past managed to make a living in landscapes we tend to perceive as inconvenient, build complex and elaborate monuments with relatively simple tools, and by shaping their landscape carved out a place for themselves in a much bigger social world. The contributions in this volume underscore how small worlds can be big at the same time. 
 Contents
 Preface 
 Social memories and site biographies: construction and perception in non-literate societies 
Johannes Müller  
 The Dutch abroad? Interpreting the distribution of the ¿beaker¿ culture
John C. Barrett  
 Early Bronze Age boat graves in the British Isles
Richard Bradley
 The nature of a Bronze Age World
Anthony Harding  
 A triangular Middle Bronze Age trade system of amber, copper and tin 1500-1300 BC
Kristian Kristiansen, Johan Ling
 Wetland knowledges: resource specialization and denial
Christopher Evans  
 Maintaining fertility of Bronze Age arable land in the northwest Netherlands 
Corrie Bakels
 Bronze Age ancestral communities ¿ new research of Middle Bronze Age burials in the barrow landscapes of Apeldoorn-Wieselseweg
David Fontijn, Arjan Louwen, Quentin Bourgeois, Liesbeth Smits, Cristian van der Linde
 And the river meanders on¿ The intertwined  habitation and vegetation history of the river area Maaskant and adjacent sand area of Oss (Netherlands) in Late Prehistory  till Early Roman Period
Richard Jansen, Corrie Bakels
 Metal surprises from an Iron Age cemetery in Nijmegen-Noord
Peter W. van den Broeke, Emile Eimermann