01539nas a2200241 4500000000100000000000100001000000100002008004100003653002900044653001400073653001900087653002100106653002200127653001800149653001500167100001600182700001900198245006400217856003500281300001300316490000600329520096200335 2018 d10aarchaeological practices10apractices10aknowledge work10ainformation work10adigital practices10adigital tools10atechnology1 aIsto Huvila1 aJeremy Huggett00aArchaeological Practices, Knowledge Work and Digitalisation uhttps://doi.org/10.5334/jcaa.6 a88–1000 v13 aDefining what constitute archaeological practices is a prerequisite for understanding where and how archaeological and archaeologically relevant information and knowledge are made, what counts as archaeological information, and where the limits are situated. The aim of this position paper, developed as a part of the COST action Archaeological practices and knowledge work in the digital environment (www.arkwork.eu), is to highlight the need for at least a relative consensus on the extents of archaeological practices in order to be able to understand and develop archaeological practices and knowledge work in the contemporary digital context. The text discusses approaches to study archaeological practices and knowledge work including Nicolinis notions of zooming in and zooming out, and proposes that a distinction between archaeological and archaeology-related practices could provide a way to negotiate the archaeologicality of diverse practices.