“…To what ex tent thi s increase in brooch es is part o f the general increase in the quantity of materi al culture in c irculati on in ge neral, or a spec ifi ca lly separate phenomen on assoc iated with personal appearance in parti cular , has been ques tioned (Hase lgro ve 1997; Willis 1997), The evidence supports the latter: this is not sim ply a situ ati onal increase in brooc h numbers; rather there are changes both to the brooc hes themse lves to the contex ts from whic h they are recovered , An initial ex aminati on of the large numbers of brooches on late fi rst cen tury BC an d early first ce ntury AD settlemen t si tes might suggest that their inhabitants were losing brooc hes more freque ntly or had more brooches to lose , Casu al loss was prob ably one important way in whi c h brooches and related obj ec ts entered the archaeologi cal rec ord, Ho wever, it was not the onl y way, Detail ed researc h on site fo rmati on processes has beco me an increasingl y im portant fe ature ofIron Age archae ology ove r the las t decad e (e,g, G wilt 1997;Hill 1992Hill , 1995a geist ' (Willis 1997) has particularly emphas ised that the archaeological record is not a simple, direct prod uct of casual loss and garbage disposal. Rather , much of the material found on Iron Age se ttlements is the product of highly structured daily rubbi sh disposal and periodic ritual deposition -sacrifice (Hill 1995a).…”