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         Australian Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Clothing and modern human behaviour: prehistoric Tasmania as a case study.(Case study): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Ian Gilligan, 2007-10-01
  2. Dolly's Creek: An Archaeology of a Victorian Goldfields Community.(Review): An article from: The Australian Journal of Politics and History by W. Ross Johnston, 2001-09-01
  3. Modelling hunter-gatherer settlement patterns: an Australian case study.(Book Review): An article from: Archaeology in Oceania by Peter Thorley, 2003-10-01
  4. Sovereign Subjects: Indigenous Sovereignty Matters (Australian Cultural Studies)
  5. Ancient Times - A Quarterly Review of Biblical Archaeology (Volume 2, No 1) by Various, 1957
  6. Landscapes Rock Art and the Dreaming: An Archaeology of Preunderstanding (New Approaches to Anthropological Archaeology) by David Bruno, Bruno David, 2001-07-15
  7. The Lost Legions: Culture Contact in Colonial Australia (Indigenous Archaeologies) by Alistair Paterson, 2007-12-28
  8. Reading Race: Aboriginality in Australian Children's Literature by Clare Bradford, 2001-09-01
  9. Civil Rights: How Indigenous Australians Won Formal Equality by John Chesterman, 2005-07-01
  10. Country, Kin and Culture: Survival of an Australian Aboriginal Community by Claire Smith, 2004-06-01
  11. A Place for Strangers: Towards a History of Australian Aboriginal Being by Tony Swain, 1996-07-30
  12. Australian archaeology in ecological and ethnographic perspective (Series in archaeology) by Richard A Gould, 1973
  13. Proposals for the development of the Australian National Centre for Excellence in Maritime Archaeology (Report) by Jeremy N Green, 1998
  14. The Enduring Past: Archaeology of the Ancient World for Australians

41. Archaeology In Oceania : Much More Than Stones And Bones. Australian Archaeology
Archaeology in Oceania Much More Than Stones and Bones. australian archaeology in the late Twentieth Century.(Book Review) @ HighBeam Research.
http://static.highbeam.com/a/archaeologyinoceania/july012003/muchmorethanstonesa

42. CDU Research -  
australian archaeology, 59, pp1022; Bourke, PM and Mulvaney, KJ (2003). Archaeology of the first recorded petroglyphs for the Darwin region.
http://www.cdu.edu.au/research/profiles/profile_bourke.htm
Home Contacts Sitemap Campus Maps ... Library Courses Units Staff CDU Web WWW for Expand All Collapse All About Our Research Focus ... Office of the Deputy Vice Chancellor for Research CDU Researcher Profile Dr Patricia Bourke BA(Hons), PhD Anthropologist contact details phone email patricia.bourke@cdu.edu.au address CINCRM, School of Australian Indigenous Knowledge Systems
Charles Darwin University
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia, 0909 fax Research interests Patricia's research interests include:
  • Australian archaeology, Cultural heritage management, Indigenous tourism and Faunal analysis of middens. Native Title process in northern Australia.
Publications Patricia's publications include:
  • Bourke, P. M. (2004) Three Aboriginal shell mounds at Hope Inlet: evidence for coastal, not maritime Late Holocene economies on the Beagle Gulf mainlaind, northern Australia. Australian Archaeology Bourke, P. M.

43. HJG: Australian Archaeology
, Publishes articles in all fields of archaeology and other subjects to archaeological research and practice in Australia and nearby areas.......
http://www.history-journals.de/journals/hjg-a00164.html
WWW-Virtual Library The History Journals Guide
by Stefan Blaschke - Periodicals Directory -
The History Index Home Complete Index Electronical Index Chronological Index ... Announcements Journal Information Contact Search Last updated: 2003-08-13. Title: A ustralian Archaeology Abbreviation: A A Description: Publishes articles in all fields of archaeology and other subjects relevant to archaeological research and practice in Australia and nearby areas. Editor(s): Donald Pate, Claire Smith;
editorial e-mail address: editors@australianarchaeology.com Publishers: Australian Archaeological Association, Inc. Start-End-Date: November 1974- Frequency: biannually Language(s): English ISSN: Keyword(s): Pacific Archaeology Website(s): Homepage of the publishers: tables of contents from 1999 to present, some book reviews availalbe online from 1995 to 2001

44. Academy Of The Humanities - Fellows Of The Academy
These years belonged to the heroic age of australian archaeology. As early as 1968 Jones had said of Australian archaeologists that with an entire
http://www.humanities.org.au/Fellows/Obituaries/Obituaries2001/Jones.htm
May 17, 2005 Obituaries Rhys Maengwyn Jones These and related issues continued to occupy Jones during his years at ANU and he lent his active support to interdisciplinary initiatives between archaeologists and field and laboratory scientists to address them. There were two particular projects in which he played a leading role. One was the search for alternative methods of dating to radiocarbon, whose effective limit around 40,000 years ago was proving an obstacle to establishing the antiquity of the human colonisation of the Australian continent and thus of its place in the appearance and expansion of Homo sapiens. The luminescence techniques with whose application he was associated have led to claims for human arrival dating back to 60,000 years ago. His last few years were darkened not only by the leukemia that took his life but also by decisions within his Research School that marginalised the study of Australian prehistory and, as he put it, made him academically redundant. His retirement at the end of June 2001 was marked by a dinner at University House where he was presented with a large volume of essays by colleagues and friends celebrating his life and achievements. He died on September 19.

45. Untitled Page
australian archaeology. 49 2327. Ph.D. and Honours Thesis and Abstracts only. Boyd, WE, Lentfer, CJ, Parr, J. F. and Jago, LCF (2004).
http://www.scu.edu.au/schools/esm/palaeo/Pub.html
Home
Research publications of Jeff Parr
Krull, E. S., Bestland, E. A., Skjemstad, J. O., Parr , J. F. and Mee, A. C. (Submitted). "Organic geochemistry (d13C, d15N, 13C-NMR) and age determinations (14C and OSL) of Red-Brown Earths from the Coonawarra-Padthaway region of South Australia: Implications for soil genesis." Geoderma. Pa rr , J. F. (2004). "Morphometric and visual fossil phytolith identification using a regionally specific digital database." Phytolitharian Parr Soil Biology and Biochemistry. Parr , J. F. (Submitted). "Effect of Fire on Phytolith Coloration." Geoarchaeology Parr , J. F. and Watson, L. (in press). Morphological characteristics observed in the leaf phytolith of select Gymnosperms of Eastern Australia . Fourth International Meeting on Phytolith Research, Cambridge University Press. Parr Paleolimnology Torrence, R., Neall, V. E., Doelman, T., Rhodes, E., McKee, C., Davies, H., Bonetti, R., Gugliemetti, A., Manzoni, A., Oddone, M., Parr , J. and Wallace, C. (2004). "Pleistocene colonisation of the Bismarck Archipelago: new evidence from West New Britain." Archaeology in Oceania Krull, E. S., Skjemstad, J. O., Graetz, D., Grice, K., Dunning, W., Cook, G. D. and

46. Southern Cross University | Library
Title, australian archaeology. Location, APAIS FullText. Start Date, Jun 1996. End Date. ISSN, 0312-2417. This journal may require a login or password
http://www.scu.edu.au/library/fulltext/detail.php?id=485

47. About The Authors Heather Burke Heather Burke Has Over Thirteen
published in 2004 by Wakefield Press. She is also an exEditor of australian archaeology, the journal of the Australian Archaeological Association.
http://www.allenandunwin.com/arch_handbook/authors.asp
About the Authors
Heather Burke

Heather Burke has over thirteen years experience as a consultant archaeologist, working in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and the Northern Territory. Her particular skills are in the fields of site recording and significance assessment (for both historical and Aboriginal archaeological sites), the assessment and recording of standing structures and mining heritage, and the interpretation and presentation of heritage sites. Heather has participated in and directed numerous archaeological site surveys and excavations for both historic and prehistoric sites across Australia. Heather holds a PhD in historical archaeology from UNE, published in 1999 by Plenum Press as Meaning and Ideology in Historical Archaeology . She taught archaeology for three years at UNE, including undergraduate courses in field methods, laboratory methods, historical archaeology and cultural heritage management. Currently Heather teaches in the Department of Archaeology at Flinders University, where she is post-graduate and honours coordinator.

48. Science -- Sign In
australian archaeology is dead. Long live archaeology, says physical Archaeology is barely 30 years old in Australia, starting with John Mulvaney in
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/280/5368/1342
You do not have access to this item: Full Text : Finkel, AUSTRALIAN ARCHAEOLOGY: Aboriginal Groups Warm to Studies of Early Australi..., Science You are on the site via Free Public Access. What content can I view with Free Public Access If you have a personal user name and password, please login below. SCIENCE Online Sign In Options For Viewing This Content User Name Password
this computer. Help with Sign In If you don't use cookies, sign in here Join AAAS and subscribe to Science for free full access. Sign Up More Info Register for Free Partial Access including abstracts, summaries and special registered free full text content. Register More Info Pay per Article 24 hours for US $10.00 from your current computer Regain Access to a recent Pay per Article purchase Need More Help? Can't get past this page? Forgotten your user name or password? AAAS Members activate your FREE Subscription

49. AUSTRALIAN ARCHAEOLOGY University Funding Feels Big Chill
But australian archaeology faces an equally dire threat today s tight fiscal climate. Volume 280, Number 5368, Issue of 29 May 1998, p. 1343.
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/short/280/5368/1343?ck=nck

50. AT A CROSSROADS: ARCHAEOLOGY AND FIRST PEOPLES IN CANADA
AT A CROSSROADS Archaeology and First Peoples in Canada. Edited by George P. Nicholas and REVIEW Originally published in australian archaeology 4971
http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology/archpress/books/crossroads.html
AT A CROSSROADS: Archaeology and First Peoples in Canada Edited by George P. Nicholas and Thomas D. Andrews, 1997 References, index, 50 illustrations, 319 pages, soft cover, perfect bound The 20 papers in this volume were written by both Native and Non-Native authors, and provide both substance and food-for-thought concerning the complex interactions between archaeologists and contemporary indigenous peoples of Canada in regard to working together, interpretation of the past, ownership of the past, and the relationships between traditional knowledge and archaeological fact. Table of Contents Foreword - Bruce G. Trigger
Preface Introduction 1. Indigenous Archaeology in the Post-Modern World
George P. Nicholas and Thomas D. Andrews
Part 1
Working Together
2. The Micmac and New Brunswick Archaeology:
Historical Perspectives and Contemporary Experiences
Helen Kristmanson 3. Cultural Interpretation in Times of Change
Kimberley L. Lawson 4. Increasing Awareness and Involvement of Aboriginal People in Heritage Preservation: Recent Developments at the Manitoba Museum of Man and Nature

51. DeptLibrary
Aspects of Plant Taphonomy in australian archaeology. MA Preliminary. Ethnic Visibility in the Archaeology of the North West Australian Colonial
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/archaeology/research/theses.html
Past La Trobe University Archaeology Theses
  • PhD Theses BECK, W. 1985. Technology, Toxicity and Subsistence: A study of Australian Aboriginal plant food processing. COSGROVE, R. 1991. The Illusion of Riches: Issues of Scale, Resolution and Explanation of Pleistocene Human Behaviour. DAVIES, P. 2001, Isolation and Integration: the archaeology and history of an Otways Forest Community. EDWARDS, I. 1993. A Potter's View of Bronze Age Pella (Jordan). A Study of Ceramic Technology. FRANKLIN, N.R. 1992. Explorations of Variability in Australian Prehistoric Rock Engravings. FULLAGAR, R.L.K. 1986. Use-wear and Residues on Stone Tools. Functional Analysis and its Application to Two Southeastern Australian Archaeological Assemblages. LAWRENCE, S. 1995. No Abiding City: the Archaeology and History of an Ephemeral Mining Settlement. PAVLIDES, C. 1999. The Story of Imlo: the Organisation of Flaked Stone Technologies from the Lowland Tropical Rainforest of West New Britain, Papua New Guinea. PICKERING, M.P. 1997. Wangala Time, Wangala Law: Hunter-gatherer Settlement Patterns in a Sub-humid to Semi-arid Environment.
  • 52. UOW Earth & Environmental Sciences
    In J.Hall and I. McNiven (eds) Australian Coastal Archaeology. In W. Beck, A. Clarke and L. Head (eds) Plants in australian archaeology.
    http://www.uow.edu.au/science/eesc/staff/lhead/lh2.html
    LINKS Lesley Head HomePage
    LESLEY HEAD ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
    Research and Scholarly Publications
    Books
    Head, L. 2000 Cultural Landscapes and Environmental Change . Arnold, London, 179pp. Head, L. 2000 Second Nature. The history and implications of Australia as Aboriginal landscape . Syracuse University Press, New York, 272pp.
    Edited volumes
    Head, L. (ed.) 1999 Holocene Human Impacts in Australia and the Western Pacific. Quaternary International Head L., Gosden, C. and White, J.P. (eds) 1994 Social Landscapes. Archaeology in Oceania Beck, W., Clarke, A. and Head, L. (eds) 1989 Plants in Australian Archaeology. Tempus 1, Anthropology Museum, University of Queensland.
    Refereed papers
    Ward, I., Nanson, G., Head, L., Fullagar, R., Price, D. and Fink, D. Late Quaternary landscape evolution in the Keep River region, northwestern Australia. Quaternary Science Reviews , in press (accepted 11/04).

    53. UOW - RAID - RSO - Publications Collection - 1998 - Quaternary Environments Rese
    the Public Face of australian archaeology”, Lesley Head, australian archaeology , Volume 46, Canberra, ACT, Australian Archaelogical Association, pp 14
    http://www.uow.edu.au/research/rso/publications/1998/research/qerc.html
    All of UOW Arts Careers Commerce Courses Creative Arts Education Engineering Handbook Informatics IT Services Law Library Media/News Research Science Staff Website UniCentre URAC UOW Home RAID RSO Publications Collection ... Organisational Structure
    1998 Publications Data
    Quaternary Environments Research Centre
    Book Chapters
    Under Bungonia , Oak Flats, NSW, JB Books, pp Under Bungonia , Oak Flats, NSW, JB Books, pp
    Journal Articles
    Australian Archaeology Volume 46, Canberra, ACT, Australian Archaelogical Association, pp Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology Volume 144, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Elsevier Science, pp Geomorphology Volume 22, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Elsevier Science, pp Sedimentology Volume 45, Oxford, UK, Blackwell Science, pp Palaeoclimates Volume pp Holocene Volume 8 No 5, Arnold, pp Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology Volume 144, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Elsevier Science, pp Archaeology in Oceania Volume 33, Sydney, NSW, University of Sydney, pp Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie Volume 42, Berlin, germany, Gebrüder Borntraeger

    54. References
    The potential of rock patination analysis in australian archaeology – part 1. The Artefact 4 14?38 The nature of analogies in australian archaeology.
    http://mc2.vicnet.net.au/home/interpret/web/reference.html
    References
    Robert G. Bednarik auraweb@hotmail.com ABREU, M. S. DE and R. G. BEDNARIK 2000. Fariseu rock art not archaeologically dated. Rock Art Research 17: 65-8.
    Anonymous 2000. ‘Archaeologically dated Palaeolithic rock art’ at Fariseu, C´a valley. Rock Art Research 17: 65.
    AUBRY, T., A. F. CARVALHO, J. ZILHO 1997. Arqueologia: Salto do Boi – Cardina I. Arte rupestre e pr©-hist³ria do Vale do C´a (trabalhos de 1995-96), pp. 1-23. Relat³rio cient­fico ao Governo da Repºblica Portuguesa, Lisbon.
    Need foreign language support?BEDNARIK, R. G. 1979. The potential of rock patination analysis in Australian archaeology – part 1. The Artefact 4: 14?38
    BEDNARIK, R. G. 1984. Die Bedeutung der pal¤olithischen Fingerlinientradition. Anthropologie 23: 73-9.
    BEDNARIK, R. G. 1986. Parietal finger markings in Europe and Australia. Rock Art Research 3: 30-61, 159-70.
    BEDNARIK, R. G. 1988. Comment on D. Mania and U. Mania, ‘Deliberate engravings on bone artefacts of Homo erectus’. Rock Art Research 5: 96-100.
    BEDNARIK, R. G. 1990/91. Epistemology in palaeoart studies. Origini 15: 57-78.

    55. B Metamorphology /b
    The potential of rock patination analysis in australian archaeology—part 2. The Artefact 5 4777. The nature of analogies in australian archaeology.
    http://mc2.vicnet.net.au/home/epistem/web/meta.html
    Metamorphology
    Boulder covered with cupules
    Metamorphology: in lieu of uniformitarianism
    ROBERT G. BEDNARIK
    Introduction
    It is useful to consider that there appears to be a lag between the time when an archaeological phenomenon, such as navigation, occurred for the first time, and the time from which we can expect the earliest solid evidence for such a phenomenon. For instance in the case of watercraft we assume that for most of the duration of their use we have no direct evidence whatsoever. The systematic peopling of islands cannot have been the first use of watercraft. Boats and rafts must have been invented earlier, because it is not likely that hominids took to the open sea as soon as they began using watercraft. So it is fairly certain that such equipment was first used over 840 000 years ago, which means that we have evidence from less than 1% of the phenomenon's real duration. I shall call the other 99% the 'taphonomic lag-time'.
    Taphonomy
    The oldest direct evidence we have of body decoration are the tattoos on the 'Iceman' from the Italian Neolithic, about 5300 years old (Barfield 1994). But again, we are fortunate to have much older, indirect evidence. The body markings on figurines such as those from Mezin, or Kostenki Nos. 1, 2, 4, 8 and 24 may depict tattoos or body painting (Abramova 1962). But ochre has been used by hominids for hundreds of millennia, in Africa, Europe and Asia, and there is no reason to assume that none of it served for body painting (Bednarik 1994a). Again, there may be an enormous taphonomic lag-time applicable to the material evidence of the phenomenon (possibly over 99%).

    56. JCU - FAESS - Dr Shelley Greer
    australian archaeology (particularly northern Cape York; Cultural Heritage Studies australian archaeology 95 Proceedings of the 1995 Australian
    http://www.faess.jcu.edu.au/saas/staff/shelley.greer.html
    @import /* hide from IE5 */ url("http://www.jcu.edu.au/includes/styles/JCUstyles.css"); Web Sitemap Search A-Z Index Contacts ... Campus Maps Quick Links Information For Prospective Students International Students Current Students Alumni Visitors Staff Jobs at JCU Information About The University Research Faculties and Divisions Library and Computing Services
    Faculty of Arts, Education and Social Sciences
    About the School Staff Disciplines Postgraduate Students International Students Archaeology Field Schools ... Staff
    Dr Shelley Greer
    Senior Lecturer in Archaeology Uni Address: Room BH 135, Social Sciences, Douglas Campus, Postal Address: School of Anthropology and Archaeology, James Cook University, Townsville, 4811. Australia. Phone: 0747814302
    Fax: 0747814045
    Email: Shelley.Greer@jcu.edu.au BA (Hons) (Syd) PhD (JCU)
    Interests
  • Australian archaeology (particularly northern Cape York Cultural Heritage Studies
  • Currently Teaching
    • - Australia Through Time and Place - Australia Through Time and Place - The World of Archaeology - Introduction to the Classical World - Introduction to the Classical World - Indigenous Heritage Training - Principles of Cultural Heritage Management - Principles of Cultural Heritage Management - Cultural Heritage Studies Honours - The Practice of Cultural Heritage Management - Thesis
    Selected Publications
    • Greer, S., J. Harrington, M. Gibbs, M. Fuary, J. Innes and D. Roe, in press. Cultural Heritage Values in the Great Barrier Reef marine Park and World Heritage Area.

    57. If I Understand The Concept Of This Page Correctly, It Is To Deal With The Origi
    The potential of rock patination analysis in australian archaeology Part 1. Some deontological home truths in archaeology. australian archaeology 39
    http://www.semioticon.com/people/Bednarik_biblio.htm
    Selected publications (in all about 1000 publications, in 32 languages): Die Grabungen in der Promenadensteighöhle (1961-1964). Die Höhle 1973. Wohnhöhlen bei Tom Price (Nordwest-Australien). Die Höhle A survey of prehistoric sites in the Tom Price Region, northwestern Australia. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 1979. The potential of rock patination analysis in Australian archaeology - Part 1. The Artefact 1980. The potential of rock patination analysis in Australian archaeology - Part 2. The Artefact 1984a. The nature of psychograms. The Artefact Die Bedeutung der paläolithischen Fingerlinientradition. Anthropologie 1985. Parietal finger markings in Australia. Bollettino del Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici 1987a. No pictographs at end of Rochester Creek rainbow. La Pintura Engramme und Phosphene. Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 1989a. On the Pleistocene settlement of South America. Antiquity 1989b. Perspectives of Koongine Cave and scientistic archaeology. Australian Archaeology 1990a. On neuropsychology and shamanism in rock art. Current Anthropology 1990b. On the cognitive development of hominids.

    58. The Samuel Griffith Society: Volume 6: Chapter Six
    australian archaeology is world archaeology, because the early humans who The Australian, 4 October, 1995. Deprecating remarks about archaeology have
    http://www.samuelgriffith.org.au/papers/html/volume6/v6chap6.htm
    Chapter Six:
    The New Official Religion:
    The Hindmarsh Island and La Trobe Affairs
    Austin Gough
    Australian public life has always had a sceptical and sardonic flavour, which has preserved us from many political mistakes, and it is a measure of the change in the intellectual climate during the Keating era that we seem to have lost some of this collective sense of the ridiculous. Ten or fifteen years ago the cartoonists would have had a field day with the spectacle of a federal minister making policy decisions on the basis of magical secrets in sealed envelopes; they might have seen the possibilities of applying this technique to other areas of government, such as the Budget Speech. More recently there has been the clash of cultures in which a court has ordered the archaeology department of La Trobe University to close down an entire program of research, and to hand over a scientifically valuable collection of non-human remains from the Ice Age period to the Tasmanian Aboriginal Land Council. Both the Hindmarsh Island enquiry and the La Trobe affair are excellent examples of the way courts and royal commissions are being asked to resolve questions that really belong to history, science and economics. It may be only a matter of time before the High Court is asked to declare the law of diminishing returns invalid, or to grant an injunction against the law of gravity.

    59. AusAnthrop: Jobs And Careers In Anthropology
    10 Australian Archaeological Association conferences. 1 australian archaeology and Technological Analysis Conference. 2 Cultural Awareness Workshops
    http://www.ausanthrop.net/resources/jobs/profile_detail.php?id=276

    60. School Of Humanities | Dr Margaret O'Hea
    this interest in australian archaeology post1788 continued until 1997 in and Near Eastern archaeology in Australia , australian archaeology vol.
    http://www.arts.adelaide.edu.au/humanities/people/classics/mohea.html
    The University of Adelaide Home Search Faculty Home ... School of Humanities
    THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
    ADELAIDE SA 5005
    AUSTRALIA ph: +61 8 8303 5638
    fax: +61 8 8303 5241
    Dr Margaret O'Hea
    Senior Lecturer
    Head of Discipline
    Room Hughes Building, 722a Phone Email margaret.ohea@adelaide.edu.au Dr Margaret O'Hea History Honours prepared me for a doctorate on the transition from Late Roman Gaul to Early Mediaeval Francia, by using, as a cultural thermometer for change, both the idea and the reality of the villa in the province of Aquitanica Prima , using archaeological material and textual evidence. How, why and at what point did the concept of the villa segue into the core of the mediaeval village ? This research interest forced me to endure summer field trips to the warm and sunny heartland of France, roaming the wine-growing countryside in search of villa remains excavated (mostly) last century.
    Being a member of the Sydney University's Expedition to Pella in Jordan since 1982/3 onwards has developed an interest in the transition from Roman to early Islamic material culture in that region. From 1994-1996, I co-directed jointly with Dr Pamela Watson, former Asst Director of the British Institute at 'Amman for Archaeology and History , the Pella Hinterland Project a 3-year field survey which examined in detail the evidence for utilisation of the land and water systems of the hinterland of the city of Pella, in order to understand better the economic infrastructure of the local region in the Roman and Byzantine periods. Final analysis of this abundant material is still underway.

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