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         African Archeology:     more books (33)
  1. Torn between three continents: the search for identity in Maryse Conde's Une Saison a Rihata and Miriam Warner-Vieyra's Juletane.(Critical Essay): An article from: Journal of Evolutionary Psychology by Debra Popkin, 2001-08-01
  2. Free Blacks on the Lower Eastern Shore of Maryland: The Colonial Period 1662-1775 by Thomas Davidson, 1991-12
  3. Proceedings of the First Pan-African Congress on Prehistory
  4. Louise Meintjes. Sound of Africa: Making Music Zulu in a South African Studio.(Book Review): An article from: The Australian Journal of Anthropology by Karl Neuenfeld, 2005-04-01
  5. Archeology of Black American culture: An annotated bibliography by Bert Salwen, 1977
  6. P. Michigan: Baptized for Our Sakes : A Leather Trisagion from Egypt (Contributions to Archeology, 120) by David Martinez, 2000-11
  7. Kofi and His Magic by Maya Angelou, 1996-11-05
  8. Africa's Glorious Legacy (Lost Civilizations)
  9. Mummies, Bones, & Body Parts (Carolrhoda Photo Books) by Charlotte Wilcox, 2000-08
  10. Pyramids (Fantastic Facts) by Peter Mellett, 2001-09
  11. Amazing World of Mummies by Fiona MacDonald, 2005-05-25
  12. The Bushman trickster: protagonist, divinity, and agent of creativity. (Articles).: An article from: Marvels & Tales by Mathias Guenther, 2002-04-01
  13. The Discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamen by Howard Carter, A. C. Mace, 1977-06-01
  14. Mummies (Totally Amazing Series) by Iqbal Hussain, 1998-08-25

21. African Research By History Link 101
ArchNet african archeology Large site with connection to other resources on thenet. Visual = N/A Content = 4 A5180 Ancient Africa By Richard Hooker Essays
http://www.historylink101.com/1/africa/africa_research.htm

African Research
Welcome to History Link 101's African Research Page. Here you will find excellent links to African Empires, Resource Pages, Timelines, and Primary Texts. History Link 101 is a site developed for World History Classes, by a World History Teacher.
Western Empires
Essay on Ghana by Richard Hooker
Visual = N/A Content = 5 A5010
The Saharan Trade Routes
One page by ThinkQuest
Visual = N/A Content = 5 A5020
Development of Mali

Visual = 5 Content = N/A A5030
Development of Songhai

Visual = N/A Content = 5 A5040
Descriptions of Timbuktu

Visual = N/A Content = 5 A5050 Timbuktu History of this major city of Mali by the History Channel Visual = 5 Content = 5 A5060
Eastern Empires
Nubia Chronology Visual = N/A Content = 5 A5080 Nubian Culture includes traditions, houses, songs, history, and more. Visual = 4 Content = 4 A5090 Essay on Askum by F.A. Smitha Visual = N/A Content = 5 A5100 Ethiopian History 9 essays including one on Aksum.

22. Harvard Gazette: Du Bois Institute Fellows 'distinguished Group'
and on issues of science, culture, and identity in South african archeologypost1994. His research project is titled Archeology and Post-Colonialism.
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2003/10.02/20-duboisfellows.html
Current Issue:
October 02, 2003
News
News, events, features Science/Research Latest scientific findings Profiles The people behind the university Community Harvard and neighbor communities Sports Scores, highlights, upcoming games On Campus Newsmakers, notes, students, police log Arts Museums, concerts, theater Calendar Two-week listing of upcoming events
HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Du Bois Institute fellows 'distinguished group'
Fourteen new scholars appointed for 2003-2004
Lawrence D. Bobo, acting director of Harvard's W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African-American Research, has announced the appointment of 14 new fellows for the 2003-04 academic year. "This year's fellows span as diverse and rich a range of interests as any group we've hosted in the past. Their fields run from business, law, and education to history, sociology, psychology, philosophy, and education," said Bobo. "The work of this distinguished group of scholars further actualizes the new name of the institute and offers the Harvard community an exciting collection of scholars who we are confident will create, provoke, and engage new dialogues in our field of study." Since its creation in 1975, the Du Bois Institute has annually appointed scholars who conduct individual research for a period of up to one academic year in a variety of fields within African and African-American studies. The institute accepts established and emerging scholars from both the humanities and social sciences. Fellows conduct their research by using resources from Harvard's extensive library system, as well as from the institute's research projects, including the African Art Database, the Image of the Black in Western Art Research and Photo Archive, and the Timbuktu Library Project, among others. Du Bois Fellows also participate in the varied activities of the institute including public conferences, lectures, readings, and forums.

23. Obsidian Hydration Studies
Obsidian Dating and East african archeology. Science 219361366. Michels, JosephW., Ignatius ST Tsong, and GA Smith. 1983b.
http://www.obsidianlab.com/info_oh.html
Obsidian hydration rim (between arrows) Introduction to Obsidian Hydration Studies INTRODUCTION PREPARATION GUIDELINES PREPARATION METHODS REFERENCES INTRODUCTION The obsidian hydration dating method was introduced to the archaeological community in 1960 by Irving Friedman and Robert Smith of the U. S. Geological Survey (Friedman and Smith 1960). The potential of the method in archaeological chronologic studies was quickly recognized and research concerning the effect of different variables on the rate of hydration has continued to the present day by Friedman and others. When a new surface of obsidian is exposed to the atmosphere, such as during the manufacture of glass tools, water begins to slowly diffuse from the surface into the interior of the specimen. When this hydrated layer or rind reaches a thickness of about 0.5 microns, it becomes recognizable as a birefringent rim when observed as a thin section under a microscope. Hydration rims formed on artifacts can vary in width from less than one micron for items from the early historic period to nearly 30 microns for early sites in Africa (Michels et al. 1983a; Origer 1989). Formation of the hydration rim is affected not only by time but also by several other variables. The most important of these are chemical composition and temperature, although water vapor pressure and soil alkalinity may also play a role in some contexts. The effects of these variables have often been summarized and will not be discussed further here (Michels and Tsong 1980; Friedman and Obradovich 1981; Freter 1993; Hull 2001; Stevenson et al., 1993, 1998, 2000; Friedman et al. 1994, 1997; Morganstein et al. 1999, Ridings 1996; see Skinner and Tremaine 1993 for additional references).

24. NativeWeb Resources: Anthropology & Archeology
african Archaeology Internet Resources, Africa, 287 archeology researchprojects University of Calgary, Africa, 132. More sites on www.ucalgary.ca
http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/science/anthropology_archeology/
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    Resources: 44 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    African Archaeology Internet Resources Africa
    Internet resources related to archaeological sub-regions of Africa and the Near East.
    More sites on archnet.uconn.edu
    AKAN of Africa - Cultural Symbols Project Africa
    The art of a particular culture can reveal ever changing human images and attitudes, so awareness of a people's indigenous art, visual and cultural symbols can become an important medium for cross-cultural understanding.
    Anthro.Net
    A Anthropological Search Engine.
    Anthropologist in the field - Laura Tamakoshi South Pacific
    South America
    UT-LANIC
    More sites on www.lanic.utexas.edu
    US - Southwest
    More sites on www.nmculture.org

    25. NativeWeb Resources: Anthropology & Archeology
    african Archaeology Internet Resources, Africa, 3723. Internet resources relatedto archaeological subregions of Africa and the Near East.
    http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/anthropology_archeology/

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    Resource Database

    Resources: 95 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    African Archaeology Internet Resources Africa
    Internet resources related to archaeological sub-regions of Africa and the Near East.
    More sites on archnet.uconn.edu
    American Society for Ethnohistory
    An academic organization made up of anthropologists, historians, museum and cultural resource professionals that seeks to describe the history of the Native Peoples of the Americas through a methodology informed by ethnographic, cultural, ecological, linguistic, archaeological and historical information.
    ancientgreece-earlyamerica.com Algonquin US - Northeast
    Draws and builds upon the works of numerous scholars, archaeologists and artists; and with its two main sides you can explore the ancient "Minoan" world and the NativeAmerican/Colonial, in vivid detail not often seen on the Web....There are lots of Native New England artifacts never seen in the world before and a many-layered history of the land and early colonies that people of all ages can enjoy. Both sides include music, film clips, archaeological artifacts fresh from the ground, and more.
    Anthro Net Search Engine for Anthropology
    On the World Wide Web there are an estimated 250,000 sites that have content relating to the subject matter of anthropology. Unfortunately an estimated four-fifths contain little useful information. There are tens of thousands of anthropology sites containing redundant links to other pages that are collections of redundant links. Anthro.Net cuts through all of this by using advanced search technology to hunt down sites that contain useful content and information relating to anthropology.

    26. Anthropology And Archeology 1-V
    The coexistence of many african traditions and modern life, and the conflicts and african American Studies Anthropology and archeology Architecture
    http://www.arkhums.org/catalog/video/anthro-archeo/
    Videotapes, Slide/Tape Anthropology and Archeology
    Part 2
    Part 3 Part 4 To quickly find a specific title, check the Title Index The Africans VHS, 60 min. each, 1985 Study guide available The Africans is a view of Africa from the inside looking out. It examines the contemporary life and history of Africa through its triple heritage: what is indigenous, what was contributed by Islam, and what was acquired from the West. The coexistence of these legacies helps to explain the diversity of the continent and the African people. 1. The Nature of a Continent The examination of Africa as the birthplace of humankind and discussion of the impact of geography on African history. The program includes the role of the Nile in the origin of civilization and the introduction of Islam to Africa through its Arabic borders. 2. A Legacy of Lifestyles African contemporary lifestyles are examined by tracing the influence of indigenous, Islamic, and Western factors. The program compares simple African societies with those that are more complex and centralized, and examines the importance of family life. 3. New Gods

    27. Celebrating African-American Archeology And History, African American History
    Celebrating africanAmerican archeology and History title graphic The SoutheastArcheological Center conducts projects that record and preserve the
    http://www.cr.nps.gov/seac/af-am/index4.htm

    Network to

    Freedom

    Annotated

    Links
    It is impossible to imagine our world without the contributions of African Americans. Be it language, art, technology, food, or music, African Americans have made a prodigious and immutable mark on American culture. The Southeast Archeological Center conducts projects that record and preserve the archeological and historical record of these contributions. The following is a sampling of these efforts.
    Gabe's Cabin in NW Louisiana

    In Those Days
    Oral History
    Beneath These Waters
    ...
    Cumberland Island Archeology

    Fort Benning:
    The Land and the People
    Popular Volume

    28. NPS Archeology Program: The Robinson House
    Archaeologists learned about the lifeways of free 19thcentury african Americansduring studies at the Robinson House, located at the heart of the First
    http://www.cr.nps.gov/archeology/robinson/
    @import url("../css/menuMatt.css"); About this series Setting the Scene James Robinson Archeology ... FirstGov MJB/EJL "The Robinson House is used as a Yankee hospital. In a visit there this morning, I found 100 of them [Yankees] packed in the rooms as thick as sardines.... The wounds of the majority were undressed, the blood had dried upon their persons and garments, and altogether there the most horrible set of beings it has been my lot to encounter."
    Felix Gregory de Fontaine, Charleston Daily Courier, September 11, 1862

    29. The South African Spheres
    of the South african spheres described as used by Forbidden archeology . Neither The Mysterious Origins of Man nor Forbidden archeology present any
    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/mom/spheres.html
    The Mysterious Origins of Man:
    The South African Grooved Sphere Controversy
    Paul Heinrich

    [Last Update: April 8, 1996]
    An Interim Report
    In the NBC program The Mysterious Origins of Man the following claims were made by Charlton Heston In Klerksdorp, South Africa, hundreds of metallic spheres were found by miners in Precambrian strata said to be a fantastic 2.8 billion years old. The controversy centers around fine grooves encircling some of the spheres. Lab technicians were at a loss to explain how they could have been formed by any known, natural process. In the above comments, The Mysterious Origins of Man is vague in two matters. First, as noted in Forbidden Archeology , the mystery spheres actually come from wonderstone quarries closer to Ottosdal, West Transvaal, South Africa than Klerksdorp. Saying that these spheres come from in Klerksdorp is confusing as it implies incorrectly that these nodules come from local gold mines. This lead to incorrect speculation on the basis of this bad data that they were pyrite concretions from the gold-bearing quartzite conglomerates. Finally, this video fails to name who the lab technicians that examined these spheres were. As a result, it is impossible to make any assessment of their expertise and credibility.

    30. African American Archaeology And African Diaspora Archaeology Resources
    african American Archaeology Resources, african American Cultures and History,african Diaspora Archaeology and History, Christopher C. Fennell,
    http://www.anthro.uiuc.edu/faculty/cfennell/bookmark3.html
    African American Archaeology,
    History and Cultures
    Table of Contents
    African American Archaeology
    General

    Sites in Northeast Region

    Sites in Mid-Atlantic
    ...
    African Heritage in Britain

    This web site is designed to provide convenient access to online presentations and resources concerning the subjects of African American archaeology, history and cultures, and broader subjects of African diaspora archaeology. The principal focus is on providing links to online presentations concerning African American archaeology projects, set out in the first sections below, with links listed alphabetically by state within each regional section. Additional links to online resources and presentations concerning African American history and culture, African archaeology, African history and cultures, African heritage in Britain, and the subjects of slavery, resistance and abolition are also provided. Bibliographies and research guides to print publications within each subject area are included. Please contact the editor, Chris Fennell , with any additional resource links you would like to see added to this site, or with the title, author, and publication information for any print sources you would like to see added to the bibliographies.

    31. Archaeology Program, University Of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
    Archaeology program, Anthropology Department, University of Illinois, a demographically integrated town founded by a free african American in 1836.
    http://www.anthro.uiuc.edu/department/archaeology/archaeology.html
    Archaeology Program
    Department of Anthropology
    University of Illinois
    September 2005 Archaeology Awareness and Conference
    Started by the preeminent Julian H. Steward, Donald Lathrap, and Charles Bareis, the archaeology program at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, has traditionally emphasized strong training in archaeological methodologies, comparative approaches, theory, and fieldwork. Our program offers B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees, including a new M.A. track concentrating on Cultural Heritage and Landscape studies, offered in conjunction with the Department of Landscape Architecture. Our graduate program
    provides students with in-depth training and education in a range of theoretical and methodological approaches to archaeological investigations. Our department archaeologists, including Drs. Stanley Ambrose Christopher Fennell Barry Lewis Timothy Pauketat ... Helaine Silverman , and Olga Soffer , maintain active research programs in historic, contact, and prehistoric period sites located in the United States, India, Peru, eastern Africa, and eastern Europe. Our graduate students are currently undertaking doctoral research throughout the world. More than a dozen other archaeologists are affiliated as adjunct faculty or as faculty and staff with other departments and programs at the University of Illinois , including the program in Ancient Technologies and Archaeological Materials ( ATAM Archaeology faculty regularly offer an array of methods courses (Archaeometry, Lithic Analysis, Ceramic Analysis, Surveying Techniques, GIS, Quantitative Analysis), regional survey courses (Africa, Central Andes, Europe, prehistoric and historic period North America), topical courses (Cultural Heritage Management, Museum Studies, Historical Archaeology, Landscape Archaeology) and theory courses (History of Archaeology, Archaeological Theory, Chiefdoms, Social Construction of Space). In addition, theory seminars are offered on a wide array of topics. In recent years, these seminars have included subjects such as: Advanced Archaeological Methods, Archaeological Approaches to Cultural Complexity, Archaeological Theory An European Perspective, Chiefdoms and Early States, Human Evolutionary Ecology, Peruvian Archaeology, Mississippian Archaeology, Origins of Modern Humans, and Prehistory of Europe.

    32. African Archaeology
    This page contains links to sites that contain information on archaeology studiesin Africa.
    http://www.cyberpursuits.com/archeo/af-arch.asp
    CyberPursuits Main Page Guides and More Regions Africa Australia and Oceania British Isles Egyptology Continental Europe Far East Central Asia Near and Middle East North America North Atlantic Topics Food and Diet Tools and Materials Underwater/Maritime Archaeoastronomy Geoarchaeology Megaliths Art in Archaeology Legal Issues Programs Academic Organizations Resources Publications and News Books Film and Photography Art and Posters Software and Games Search ArchNet
    Buy Archaeology Art and Prints Books
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    Search by keywords:
    Visitors since October 2002
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    The links on this web site are provided for reference purposes. CyberPursuits has no control over the content of off-site links and cannot be held responsible for any harm real or perceived incurred as a result of launching to another site through a URL located on this Web site.
    African Archaeology
    All links leave the site and open a new window

    33. ArchNet: Regions / Africa And Near East
    Resources for african Archaeology. Internet resources related to archaeologicalsubregions of Africa and the Near East. To register your server click here.
    http://archnet.asu.edu/archnet/regions/africa.php3
    Resources for African Archaeology
    Internet resources related to archaeological sub-regions of Africa and the Near East. To register your server click here Updated: December, 2001

    34. Africa: 7000 Years Of History In Central Africa
    His research interests include the archaeology of Africa and Europe. Hence thecontribution of archeology to the history of Africa is not limited to the
    http://www.empereur.com/Africa/history/archaeology.html
    Welcome to Africa Archaeology in Africa
    7000 Years of History in Central Africa
    Focuses on Gabon and Central African archaeology Has a list of journals which publish on African archaeology, bibliographies on archaeology in Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo-Brazzaville, Congo-Kinshasa, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon (books, articles, unpublished studies). Has the full text issues of Nsi , Liaison bulletin of the archaeologists from the bantu area. Site maintained by B.Clist, R.Lanfranchi and others. http://myweb.worldnet.net/~clist/AfricCen/
    Full text research papers
    include:
    Archaeology Africa
    Project of the Research Unit for the Archaeology of Cape Town (RESUNACT), Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town. Prof. Martin Hall heads the project. Involves primary and secondary schools in excavating sites . Includes a history of Genadendal, information on a walking tour of slave sites in Cape Town, extensive links to related web sites. http://www.archafrica.uct.ac.za/

    35. Category:African Archaeology - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    Archaeology articles relating to Africa. Articles in category african archaeology .There are 14 articles in this category.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:African_archaeology
    Category:African archaeology
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    Archaeology articles relating to Africa
    Articles in category "African archaeology"
    There are 19 articles in this category.
    A
    C
    E
    H
    K
    O
    P
    R
    S
    T
    V
    Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:African_archaeology Categories Archaeology Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox

    36. African History - Archaeology
    Guide to internet resources about archaeology in subSaharan Africa.
    http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/history/hisarche.html
    Countries Topics Search the Africa Pages Suggest a Site ... History: Archaeology
    African Archaeology
    News, links to web resources by African region, ancient maps, bibliographies, journals, Africanist archaeologists' web sites, discussion lists, directories, university programs, organizations. "developed from the "Anthropology Resources on the Internet" (ARI) directory.... started by Allen Lutins in 1995" Part of the World Wide Web Virtual Library. Maintained by Bernard Clist since 1999. [KF] http://www.african-archaeology.net
    African Timelines
    http://www.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/timelines/htimelinetoc.htm
    Archaeology Africa
    Project of the Research Unit for the Archaeology of Cape Town (RESUNACT), Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town. Prof. Martin Hall heads the project. Involves primary and secondary schools in excavating sites . Includes a history of Genadendal, information on a walking tour of slave sites in Cape Town, extensive links to related web sites. http://www.archafrica.uct.ac.za/
    ArchNet - African Archaeology
    A collection of archeological web sites at the Univ. of Connecticut: http://archnet.uconn.edu/regions/africa.php3

    37. Archaeology Of Africa - MavicaNET
    Atlas of african Archaeology; Development of Urbanism; Global Urbanism; african Archaeology The Search for the Beginnings of Humankind - English
    http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/eng/8651.html
    selCatSelAlt="Deselect category"; selCatDesAlt="Select category"; selSitSelAlt="Deselect site"; selSitDesAlt="Select site";
    MavicaNET - Multilingual Search Catalog MavicaNet Lite - Light version
    Catalog

    Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Irish Italian Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian (cyr.) Serbian (lat.) Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian Culture Science Humanities Archaeology ... History of Africa Archaeology of Africa
    Sites

    Sister categories ... Archaeology of Asia Archaeology of Europe Archaeology of the Americas Biblical Archaeology History of Algeria History of Angola History of Benin History of Botswana History of Burkina Faso History of Burundi History of Cameroon History of Central African Rep... History of Chad History of Comoros History of Djibouti History of Egypt History of Equatorial Guinea History of Eritrea History of Ethiopia History of Gabon History of Gambia History of Ghana History of Guinea History of Guinea Bissau History of Kenya History of Lesotho History of Liberia History of Libya History of Madagascar History of Malawi History of Mali History of Mauritania History of Mauritius History of Morocco History of Mozambique History of Namibia History of Niger History of Nigeria History of Reunion History of Rwanda History of Saint Helena History of Sao Tome and Princi...

    38. African Studies: Art And Archaeology
    Art and Archaeology of Africa. AAfri Afro Art B C D E FG H I K L M N O P R S T U W african Archaeology WWW Virtual Library (Bernard-Olivier Clist,
    http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/cuvl/AfArt.html
    CU Home Libraries Home Search Site Index ... Help Search Library Catalog: Title (start of title) Journal (start of title) Author (last, first) Keyword (and, or, not, "") Subject Go To CLIO >> Find Databases: Title Keywords Title (start of title) Keywords Go To Databases >> Find E-Journals: Title (start of title) Title Keywords Subject Keywords Go To E-Journals >> Search the Libraries Website: Go To Advanced Website Search >> About the Libraries Libraries Collections Digital Collections Hours Directions to Columbia Map of Campus Libraries More... Catalogs CLIO (Columbia's Online Catalog) Other Catalogs at CU and Nearby A-Z List of Library Catalogs Course Reserves More... E-Resources Citation Finder Databases E-Journals E-Books E-Data E-News E-Images Subject Guides More...

    39. African Archaeology -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
    Categories african archaeology The continent of (The second largest continent; External links. african Archaeology a web directory on Africa.
    http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/A/Af/African_archaeology.htm
    African archaeology
    [Categories: African archaeology]
    The continent of (The second largest continent; located south of Europe and bordered to the west by the South Atlantic and to the east by the Indian Ocean) Africa has the longest record of human activity of any part of the world and along with its geographical extent, it contains an enormous archaeological resource. Scholars have studied (Archeology of ancient Egyptian artifacts) Egyptology for centuries but archaeologists have only paid serious attention to the rest of the continent in more recent times.
    Pliocene and Pleistocene Africa
    The earliest evidence of archaeological activity anywhere comes from the (A valley with steep sides; formed by a rift in the earth's crust) Rift Valley sites of East Africa such as (A gorge in northeastern Tanzania where anthropologists have found some of the earliest human remains) Olduvai Gorge in modern-day (A republic in eastern Africa) Tanzania . It is thought that the earliest (A primate of the family Hominidae) hominid s evolved in Olduvai or somewhere similar around 4 million years ago. The are known as

    40. African Archaeology At Www.african-archaeology.net
    The african archaeology portal, part of the WWW Virtual Library all the websites relating to african archaeology are listed here.
    http://www.archeodroit.net/african-archaeology/
    AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY - the World Wide Web Library The African-Archaeology.Net web site has developed from the " Anthropology Resources on the Internet " (ARI) directory specialising in Anthropology. It was started by Allen Lutins in 1995 and taken over by Bernard-Olivier Clist in 1999. It has been felt for some time the african archaeology resources listed in ARI would benefit from a specific web resource bringing together the information gathered for the last few years and stored under various topics headings. Site map About the Virtual Library WWW Virtual Library Cenral Database WWW Virtual Library Archaeology ... Contact
    www.african-archaeology.net © 2004-2005

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