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         African Archeology:     more books (33)
  1. James City project: Test excavations at a 19th century freedman community by Lawrence E Abbott, 1988
  2. Ethno-Archaeology in Jenne, Mali: Craft and Status Among Smiths, Potters, and Masons (Bar International Series) by Adria Jean LaViolette, 2000-01
  3. Egypt: Land of the Pharaohs (Lost Civilizations) by Time-Life Books, 1992-03
  4. Race in Contemporary Brazil: From Indifference to Inequality. (Book Reviews/Comptes Rendus). (book review): An article from: The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology by Margo L. Matwychuk, 2002-05-01
  5. Mestas Perez, Marielna. 1999. Una Aproximacion a la Tradicion Oral de Capaya, Estado Miranda.(incluye otras resenas )(Resena de libro): An article from: Montalbán by Angelina Pollak-Eltz, 2000-01-01

41. African Archaeology At Www.african-archaeology.net : Universities In Africa
The african archaeology portal all the web sites relating to african archaeologyare listed here.
http://www.archeodroit.net/african-archaeology/universities.html
AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY - the World Wide Web Virtual Library Africa North America Europe ... other research Institutions under construction Sites linking to continental resources :
Association of African Universities

Search African Higher Education Institutions

General Education Online (GEO)
(World wide search for a school web site) African Universities Note : the african universities URLs - even ones in South Africa - may be slow in responding...
Please be patient, or try later ...
In francophone Africa, Archaeology is separate from Anthropology and can be found in the "Faculté des Lettres". Algeria : Algiers University
Département d'Archéologie

Top of page
Benin : Ecole du Patrimoine Africain
Top of page
Botswana : Botswana University
History Department
, Archaeology Unit
Top of page
Egypt : check The Egyptian Universities Network The egyptian universities' web sites are bilingual, arabic and english, one exception : the Senghor University in Alexandria. Ain Shams University (Cairo) Antiquities Department, Faculty of Arts American University (Cairo) Humanities and Social Sciences Cairo University (Cairo) Faculty of Archaeology African Studies and Research Institute , Department of Anthropology Mansoura University (Mansoura) Faculty of Arts (Egyptian Archaeology and Islamic Archeology) Tanta University (Tanta) Faculty of Arts, Tanta Branch

42. Nile And Geology
In The Archaeology of Africa Food, Metals and Towns edited by Thurstan Studies in african Archaeology Vol. 2. Poznan Poznan Archaeological Museum.
http://www.geocities.com/TimesSquare/Alley/4482/Nile.html
Nile and geology
Re: "Nile and geology" (Jan 8, 2001)
From: Leslie E. Bailey (le-bailey-11@alumni.uchicago.edu)
Small literature list for those interested in the geography of the Nile valley and in Egypt's geology and ecology in general. Go to EEF index page (for EEF Charter and membership registration)

43. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PRE-COLONIAL AFRICA:
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PRECOLONIAL AFRICA archeology, HISTORY, LANGUAGES, CULTURE,AND ENVIRONMENTS. JOSEPH O. VOGEL, ED. WALNUT CREEK, CA ALTAMIRA PRESS,
http://web.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v2/v2i1a7.htm
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PRE-COLONIAL AFRICA: ARCHEOLOGY, HISTORY, LANGUAGES, CULTURE, AND ENVIRONMENTS. JOSEPH O. VOGEL, ED. WALNUT CREEK, CA: ALTAMIRA PRESS, A DIVISION OF SAGE PUBLICATION, 1997, 605 pp., cloth $124.95.
Joseph Vogel's edited volume is a welcome compendium of topics on pre-colonial Africa. It brings together an impressive array of authors, topics, and ideas that will allow the book to serve as a reference for those needing to venture outside their specializations on Africa. African history can suffer from the same problem that other colonized areas experience in the minds of many, that is the assumption that its history starts with colonialism because a comparative abundance of records from that era exists. This volume, then, serves the wider purpose of bringing, in an easily accessible way, some balance to this problem. The encyclopedia format is useful, not so much for ease of reference, but for the shorter pieces contained in the volume, allowing a much more amplified breadth than would otherwise be possible. After a fairly comprehensive introduction, the book is organized into five sections dealing with African environments, histories of research, technology, people and agriculture, and the prehistory of Africa. Regrettably, the shortest section is on African environments. It covers an enormous range of time and space in too few pages. Given the large interest in various disciplinary communities with the type and extent of vegetation zones existing prior to recorded history, it is surprising that this topic is given such short treatment.

44. 50/50 - SA's Top Enviro Tv Programme
african archaeology has made an important contribution in this arena that notonly reconstruct Dr George Abungu – african Archeological Institute
http://www.5050.co.za/inserts.asp?ID=6491

45. Archaeology, Antiquities, Theft, And Looting - (“Electronic Bibliography” Of U
Turkish Antiquities. african Archaeology. Asian Archaeology. · Afganistan.· Cambodia http//www.cynews.com/July/10/news071014.htm. african Archaeology
http://www.museum-security.org/artifacts-saz.htm
http://www.museum-security.org/
securma@xs4all.nl
Archaeology, Antiquities, Theft, and Looting
Date sent: Fri, 21 May 1999 11:39:45 -0500 From: saz@kwom.com Send reply to: saz@kwom.com Organization: SAZ PRODUCTIONS, INC. To: securma@xs4all.nl Copies to: hjarvis@acsu.buffalo.edu Subject: Archaeology, Antiquities, Theft, and Looting - (“Electronic Bibliography” of URL’s ) Dear Subscribers, In the course of my research (A search for the World’s Most Wanted Art) I’ve often pondered the fate of lost artifacts. In the belief that greater awareness is needed to promote the recovery of “lost relics”, we’d like to share some of our research on archaeological theft, looting and related URL’s. Further contributions, or ideas on greater dissemination of like material are most welcome. Hope you find this information of interest. Jonathan Sazonoff Pres. Saz Prod., Inc. www.saztv.com Contributing US Ed. Museum Security Network www.museum-security.org/saz.html Outline: Bibliographies American Archaeology Native American Ethnographic Material Messo-American Archaeology European Archaeology France Greece Italy United Kingdom Middle Eastern Archaeology Egypt Iraq Antiquities Isreal Antiquities Jordan Antiquities Lebanon Antiquities Pakistan Antiquities Turkish Antiquities African Archaeology Asian Archaeology Afganistan Cambodia China Ceylon India Japan Nepal To begin this overview, we defer to the top bibliographies in the field.

46. African Archaeology - The Search For The Beginnings Of Humankind
Explores the theories of the evolutionary tree of humans and the classificationof the fossils behind it. Includes a bibliography.
http://www.utexas.edu/courses/wilson/ant304/projects/projects97/weimanp/weimanp.
African Archaeology The Search for the Beginnings of Humankind
A bout 3.6 million years ago, three early hominids were walking across the plains of what is now known as Laetoli in East Africa when the volcano Sadiman erupted, showering the earth with ashes. A light rain was falling at the same time, and as the hominids continued to walk, each footprint they made was cast into the mixture of muddy ash. When the impressions later dried, the result was two rows of footprints; apparently, two of the hominids walked side by side, the third, perhaps a juvenile, trailed behind the one on the right, stepping in the footprints of his predecessor. T hree and a half million years later, these footprints were to be found by Mary Leakey and her team of archaeologists. The incredible find, however, is more than just an important archaeological discovery, although it is certainly that. The finding of actual footprints from humankind's ancient ancestors represents the true grandeur of the archaeological bounty to be found in Africa, as well as how far the archaeology of human evolution has come. Only fifty years before the footprint find of 1978, very few scientists believed humans had originated in Africa. Practically ignoring Raymond Dart's Taung Baby from South Africa, attention on the search for the earliest humans was focused on China, where the Peking Man skull was found. Scientists such as Sir Arthur Keith, who wrote

47. Project MUSE
The importance of african archaeology is noted by Brian Fagan, pointing out Yet John Thorton notes that african archaeology is of recent origin and that
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/research_in_african_literatures/v031/31.2bourguigno
How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
Access Restricted
This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information.
Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on Bourguignon, Erika 1924- "Encyclopedia of Precolonial Africa: Archaeology, History, Languages, Cultures, and Environments (review)"
Research in African Literatures - Volume 31, Number 2, Summer 2000, pp. 238-239
Indiana University Press

Excerpt
This is a large and ambitious work, whose "primary function" is to be a "summary of the current state of Africanist archeology" (20). As such, it is successful. The volume also includes limited attempts at including information on languages and cultures. Because they draw almost exclusively on archeological sources, the articles on Cultures or "Lifeways" are less successful. Regrettably, the terms "pre-colonial," "colonialism," "pre-historic," and "Stone-age" are not defined and therefore offer some potential for confusion. The importance of African archaeology is noted by Brian Fagan, pointing out that "Africa's archaeological record [of] 2.5 million years is the longest in the world" (51). He observes that "in Africa, archaeology is a...

48. All Archaeology - African Archaeology
categorized resource directory for everything about archaeology. Learn everythingabout african Archaeology.
http://www.allarchaeology.com/africanarchaeology/
All Archaeology Archaeology Newsletter Archives Archaeology Resources Advertise on this site ...
Suggest Category

African Archaeology
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From ArabicNews, Archaeological evidence on North-African influence on Iberian
populations were found in a cavern near the northern city of Tetouan. African-American Archaeology Newsletter
Online newsletter of the African-American Archaeology Network, archived since
Spring 1994. SEASONALITY : BIBLIOGRAPHY
A selected bibliography of studies related to determining seasonality from bone
remains. Settlement Archaeology in Nigeria
The history of scientific archaeological research in Nigeria and its relatively
recent development. Bristol University - Department of Archaeology and Anthropology ...

49. African Culture History
african Culture History and Archaeology Cultural history and archaeology from Africa.
http://archaeology.about.com/od/africa/
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Archaeology World Atlas Africa Homework Help Archaeology Essentials Ancient Daily Life ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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African Culture History
Cultural history and archaeological studies from the continent of Africa.
Alphabetical
Recent African Diaspora Archaeology Network From Christopher Fennel at the University of Chicago, a website dedicated to the archaeology and cultural history of the migration of peoples from out of Africa. World Atlas: Africa The World Atlas of Archaeology was developed in the late 1990s for this website, and is currently under revitalization. Here is the index page for culture history of the continent, and separate country pages. Afar Triangle The Afar Triangle is the name given to the region of Ethiopia known for the identification of very old hominid remains, especially the Australopithicus afarensis. Africa South of the Sahara From North Park University, a collection of articles linked to a timeline on culture history of the sub-saharan part of the continent.

50. African Africa Archaeology
reviewed and annotated resources for african archaeology.
http://www.archaeolink.com/african_archaeology.htm
African Archaeology Home Ancient African Civilizations African Anthropology Main Headings Africa Archaeology Archaeoastronomy Asia Archaeology Australia / Oceania Archaeology ... Archaeology Lesson Plans To archaeology pages index Adi Ainawalid About ethnoarchaeological study at the village of Adi Ainawalid, Ethiopia. A brief page describing how current agriculture can shed light on prehistoric Ethiopia and the civilization of Aksum. Check out the rest of the website while you are here. - From Dr. A. Catherine D'Andrea - http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology/dept/fac_bio/dandrea/adi.htm African Archaeology - The Search for the Beginnings of Humankind "About 3.6 million years ago, three early hominids were walking across the plains of what is now known as Laetoli in East Africa when the volcano Sadiman erupted, showering the earth with ashes. A light rain was falling at the same time, and as the hominids continued to walk, each footprint they made was cast into the mixture of muddy ash. When the impressions later dried, the result was two rows of footprints; apparently, two of the hominids walked side by side, the third, perhaps a juvenile, trailed behind the one on the right, stepping in the footprints of his predecessor...Three and a half million years later, these footprints were to be found by Mary Leakey..." and a fascinating story unfolds. - From Ted Wieman - http://www.utexas.edu/courses/wilson/ant304/projects/projects97/weimanp/weimanp.html

51. SLU Anthropology Department>Faculty
Monograph in african Archaeology, and he has published numerous papers on his archaeology, Neanderthals, african archaeology, and zooarchaeology (faunal
http://web.stlawu.edu/anthropology/faculty.html
Dr. Shinu Abraham (Visiting Assistant Professor, Ph.D. U Pennsylvania) has done archaeological fieldwork in Egypt, Israel, India, and the US. Her research focuses on ancient Indo-Roman trade and the emergence of social complexity in Late Iron Age/Early Historic South India, the archaeology of ethnic identity, the rise of complex societies, and archaeological theory. Most recently, she directed a field survey project in the southern Indian state of Kerala designed to re-evaluate early South Indian ceramic and mortuary material culture. Her course offerings include ancient civilizations; archaeology of South Asia, archaeology and identity; and science and pseudoscience in archaeology.
Email: sabraham@stlawu.edu Phone: 315-229-5723 Dr. John Barthelme (Associate Professor, Ph.D. Berkeley) has done archaeological work for many years in East Africa. His study Fisher-Hunters and Neolithic Pastoralists in East Turkana, Kenya appeared as a Cambridge Monograph in African Archaeology, and he has published numerous papers on his research. Every two to three years he runs an archeology summer field course in Kenya. He offers courses in human origins, environmental

52. Welcome To The Journal Of African Archaeology - Home
The Journal of african Archaeology is an international, peerreviewed periodicalappearing half-yearly since 2003. It publishes papers focusing on aspects
http://www.african-archaeology.de/
Africa Magna Verlag
Welcome to African Archaeology!
The Journal of African Archaeology is an international, peer-reviewed periodical appearing half-yearly since 2003. It publishes papers focusing on aspects of African archaeology and related disciplines. The journal's main purpose is to provide scholars and students of archaeology with a new pan-African forum for discussing relevant topics on cultural dynamics
of past African societies.
Editors:
Editorial Board

info@african-archaeology.de
Journal's contents:
Current issue Online Library
Recommendation Form
Journal
Subscription 2005
ISSN: 1612-1651
Subscription rates for the year 2005, volume 3, 2 issues:
(Rates include postage by standard mail and packing) Subscribe now!
Institutional: Subscribe now!
Personal: (all countries) Subscribe now! Current issue, volume 3 (1), 2005 The subscription runs for one year and will be automatically renewed for a further year, unless notice of cancellation is given at least six weeks prior to the expiration of the current subscription. Subscribe now!

53. Journal Of African Archaeology Vol3.1
The Archaeology of Islam in SubSaharan Africa. David W. Phillipson Review ofGraham Connah. Forgotten Africa An Introduction to its Archaeology.
http://www.african-archaeology.de/vol3(1).html
Africa Magna Verlag
Subscribe now!
Journal's contents:
Current issue Editorial Board info@african-archaeology.de
Contents
Journal of African Archaeology Vol. 3 (1) 2005
Subscribe now! Order now! Price: 50 EUR
Contents:
D. J. Watson
Under the Rocks: reconsidering the origin of the Kintampo Tradition and the development of food production in the Savanna-Forest/Forest of West Africa
A. B. Stahl
Glass Houses Under the Rocks: A Reply to Watson
D.J. Watson
Straws within a Glass House: A Reply to Stahl
A preliminary report of excavations in Fewet, Libyan Sahara
D. Usai
Early Holocene Seasonal Movements between the Desert and the Nile Valley. Details from the Lithic Industry of some Khartoum Variant and some Nabta/Kiseiba Sites. D. Pleurdeau The Lithic Assemblage of the 1975-1976 Excavation of the Porc-Epic Cave, Dire-Dawa, Ethiopia. Implications for the East African Middle Stone Age. Culture and technology in the pottery of the medieval Sahel: a preliminary view from the Makarauci valley, Niger Sociopolitical formation on the Yoruba northern frontier: A report of recent work at Ila-Iyara, Central Nigeria

54. African Studies Center| Africa: Archaeology & Anthropology
ArchNet Resources for african Archaeology. Internet resources related toarchaeological subregions of Africa and the Near East. The Bedu Masquerade
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/About_African/ww_anth.html

55. Africa Book Centre Ltd Archaeology
Fully illustrated account of african archaeology from prehistory and the originsof humanity A multi authored introduction to the archaeology of Africa,
http://www.africabookcentre.com/acatalog/Online_Catalogue_Archaeology_161.html
Quick search Online Catalogue BROWSE BY SUBJECT Archaeology
2005 052154002X Paperback
2004 Paperback
2001 hardback
ARCHAEOLOGY IN AFRICA AND IN MUSEUMS
2003 Paperback
THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF SOUTHERN AFRICA
2002 Paperback
CATALOGUE OF STONE AGE ARTEFACTS FROM SOUTHERN AFRICA IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM
2002 Paperback
2001 hardback 2002 paperback 2000 hardback 1997 Paperback 2002 1999 Paperback MUSEUMS AND ARCHAEOLOGY IN WEST AFRICA 1997 Paperback 2001 paperback 2001 paperback 1996 Hardback 1991 Hardback 2002 Hardback 2001 paperback 2003 Paperback Online Catalogue BROWSE BY SUBJECT Archaeology

56. Archaeological News
University of Botswana Hosts african Archaeology Congress All Africa UpdateInteractive Dig at Sagalassos Archaeology Magazine June 30th, 2005 Edition
http://www.archaeologica.org/NewsPage.htm
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September 17th, 2005 Edition
Ancient military castle discovered in Ardebil
Islamic Republic News Agency
Archaeologists and volunteers looking for evidence of the Salisbury Confederate Prison's wall
Salisbury Post
A Number Of Works Of Art Unearthed In Parion Ancient City
Turkish Press
Deep-sea archaeologists look for secrets in ‘Shipwreck 7’
Kathimerini
September 16th, 2005 Edition

57. ARCHPUBLICARC
Public Archaeology and Mining. Some Journals relating to Southern african Archaeology Southern african Field Archaeology. Issued April and September.
http://www.museumsnc.co.za/McGregor/departments/Archaeology/archpublicarchaeo.ht
Home Departments Satellites Bigger museums ... Articles for Sale
Public Archaeology and
Archaeological Tourism
Public Archaeology and Archaeological Tourism Public Archaeology and Mining Some Journals relating to Southern African Archaeology Public Archaeology and Archaeological Tourism The numbers of visitors - local and overseas tourists - to a limited range of archaeological sites in the Northern Cape, in recent years, shows a burgeoning interest. It is our hope that more sites can be made accessible in this way, and to the benefit of communities living near to the sites. The Khoisan Legacy Project, Northern Cape Rock Art Trust, and this museum, are just some of the organisations seeking to help make such sites better known. An enormous responsibility rests on developers, that the integrity of each site is preserved; that the resource is sustainable in the long term. The South African Heritage Resources Agency (SAHRA) has drafted guidelines for this, and it is necessary for a land-owner or developer of a site to obtain a permit before opening a site to the public. It is hoped that greater public awareness of the sites, and of the issues involved in their preservation, will help in conserving them for generations to come.

58. African Archaeology - Book Information
The Changing Role of Ethnographic Imagination in african Archaeology Paul J . 12 The Bantu Problem and african Archaeology Manfred Eggert (Institut für
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book.asp?ref=1405101563

59. 1Up Science > Links Directory > Social Sciences: Archaeology: Publications
Publishes articles on all periods of african archaeology. Online newsletterof the africanAmerican Archaeology Network, archived since Spring 1994.
http://www.1upscience.com/links/archaeology-publications.html
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60. Adria LaViolette
My primary research interests are in eastern african archaeology, africanArchaeology, Peoples and Cultures of Africa, Archaeology of Colonial
http://www.virginia.edu/anthropology/adria.html
Adria LaViolette
Associate Professor
Ph.D. Washington University 1987
My primary research interests are in eastern African archaeology, particularly that of later medium-range and large-scale societies, and the interface between archaeology, ethnology, and history. Throughout the last 2,000 years, the eastern African coast and its hinterland has been a mosaic of hunting/gathering, pastoralist, mixed farming and urban societies, interacting in the context of migrations, long-distance trade, technological transformations, religious conversions, alliances and hostility, internationalism, and colonialism. The variety of middle-range (or `chiefdom') societies and urban forms in Africa has become central to later African archaeological research, and it is Swahili urbanism where my current research lies. The above project builds on research I developed while teaching archaeology at the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in the late 1980s. After working with students on coastal village sites, I began research at Pujini, a 15th-16th-century palatial Swahili settlement on Pemba. My vantage point from that political center led to my looking at Pemba as a series of interlocking regional systems. In 1997 I thus began excavating the large 8th-18th-century Swahili stonetown of Chwaka, linked to Pujini in extensive oral traditions on the island, focusing on the internal organization of the town itself. I have an active interest in African urbanisms generally. Inspired by questions about the organization of early towns in West Africa, I conducted an ethnoarchaeological study of craft producers in Jenne, Mali which recently appeared as a monograph. I am currently publishing the Pujini research and preliminary research from Chwaka. I am committed to working closely with colleagues and students in Tanzania on issues of representation of Swahili culture. I engage in public-minded archaeology in Tanzania through the production of interpretive museum displays and teaching materials, making presentations in municipal and local forums, and maintaining a lively dialogue with the Swahili communities in which I conduct research.

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