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         Australian Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Quseir El-Amarna (Australian Centre for Egyptology Reports) by A. El-Khouli, 1989-01
  2. The God Min to the End of the Old Kingdom (Australian Centre for Egyptology Studies) by A. McFarlane, 1996-01
  3. The Teti Cemetery at Saqqara: Minor Burials and Other Materials (The Australian Centre for Egyptology Reports) by K. Sowada, T. Callaghan, et all 1999-11
  4. Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology, 2007 (Bulletin of the Ace 18)
  5. The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism (Politics, History, and Culture) by Elizabeth A. Povinelli, 2002-04
  6. The Batavia journal of Francisco Pelsaert: Algemeen Rijksarchief [ARA], The Hague, Netherlands : Document 1630: 1098 QQ11, fol.232-316 (Report / Dept. ... Western Australian Maritime Museum) by Francisco Pelsaert, 1998
  7. Meaning and Ideology in Historical Archaeology: Style, Social Identity and Capitalism in an Australian Town by Heather Burke, 1999
  8. The Tombs of El-Hagarsa II (Australian Centre for Egyptology Reports) by N. Kanawati, 1995-01
  9. The Tombs of El-Hagarsa I (Australian Centre for Egyptology Reports) by N. Kanawati, 1993-01
  10. A manual for the identification of fish bones: A guide to comparative skeletal collection in the Department of Prehistory (Technical bulletin / Dept. of ... Studies, Australian National University) by Gary L Barnett, 1978
  11. The Teti Cemetery at Saqqara II: The Tomb of Ankhmahor (Australian Centre for Egyptology Reports) by N. Kanawati, A. Hassan, 1997-01
  12. The archaeology of Arnhem land by F. D McCarthy, 1960
  13. Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology Vol 17, 2006
  14. Archaeologies of the Self: The Autobiographical Child.: An article from: Journal of Australian Studies by Edward Hills, 1998-12-01

121. Other Libraries
Quick links American, Archaeological Society, australian, Austrian, Canadian, Dutch, australian ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE Zaharítsa 23 Koukáki 11741
http://www.bsa.gla.ac.uk/library/libs.htm
Other Libraries Archaeological libraries in Athens
Non-archaeological libraries in Athens

Bookshops in Athens
Library users can gain access to material not in the BSA Library through access to other libraries. These can be visited locally in person or in some cases online. There are more than 20 post-graduate research libraries in Athens alone, specialising in one or more aspects of research on Greece. Within walking distance of the School, these amount to the largest collection of research materials on Hellenic studies in the world. In addition the collections of many overseas libraries are available on-line for further bibliographic searches.
Archaeological libraries in Athens Members of the School may use the libraries of the Archaeological Society and the other research Institute libraries in Athens using their Museum pass from the Greek Ministry of Culture as identification. Additional identification such as a passport or identity card may also be required. Quick links: American Archaeological Society Australian Austrian ... Swiss American School of Classical Studies
Athens 10676 Librarian: D. Photiadi

122. Australian Research Repositories Online To The World
Program and abstracts of the 2001 australian Archaeological Association Annual Conference, 68 December 2001, Kondari Resort, Hervey Bay, Queensland.
http://search.arrow.edu.au/apps/ArrowUI/?adapter=ViewASRCListAdapter§ion=430

123. Archaeological Review
Between March 1st and April 15th 2000, the australian Archaeological Mission to The australian Archaeological Mission intends to continue research at
http://www.enhg.org/tribulus/trib12.htm
From Tribulus magazine . . .
Archaeological Review
The following is a selection of reports received, covering work during the course of the 1999-2000 winter/spring season. Reports from other archaeological teams and Departments are always welcome.
Excavations at Jebel Buhays The Directorate of Antiquities of the Sharjah Department of Culture and Information and an archaeological team from the University of Tubingen (Germany) conducted further excavations at Jebel Buhays, near Al-Madam, in the early part of the year. The work shed new light on the beginnings of human settlement in the interior of south-eastern Arabia. It now appears that nomadic tribes first came to the area around Jebel Buhays more than 7000 years ago. They left traces in the form of 'roasting pits,' shallow holes in the ground filled with burnt cobblestones and black ash. Around these pits, small splinters of animal bones were found, the remains of meals which have been dated to between 5200 - 4300 BC. Stone knives used for cutting the meat and other flint tools have also been recovered, and indicate a particular Late Stone Age technology typical for this area and period of time. Most remarkable of the Jebel Buhays finds is a graveyard which contains the remains of more than 300 people in a very small area, measuring less than 20 m. square. Skeletons are closely packed, while later burials were often cut into earlier ones, making it extremely difficult for the skeletal remains to be separated. Many skeletons had personal adornments. Women appear sometimes to have worn a carnelian bead or a pearl on a nose ring. Even children were buried with jewellery, like necklaces, armlets and anklets, often consisting of strings of more than a hundred beads. Casts of several burials have been made, which are on display in the Sharjah Archaeological Museum.

124. Jane Lydon- CAIS - Monash University
(forthcoming) Archaeological Heritage Management in Australia. (provisional title) in Murray, T. (ed.) World Journal of Prehistoric and Ancient Studies
http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/cais/research/st_jl.html
Skip to content Change text size Monash home Arts home ... Site map SEARCH CAIS Arts Faculty All of Monash enter search terms About CAIS Indigenous Student Support Indigenous Studies Koorie Research CAIS Staff E. E. Library Arts Faculty ... Print version
Research Staff
Dr Jane Lydon
Post-Doctoral Fellow
Gallery Building, Room 217
jane.lydon@arts.monash.edu.au
Many Inventions: the Chinese in the Rocks 1890-1930 (1999, Monash Publications in History). Between 2000-2002 she developed and coordinated a new heritage management program at La Trobe University. Her doctoral research into colonial photography at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, in Victoria , south-eastern Australia , showed how shifting ideas about Aboriginal people were expressed through a powerful and widely-circulated visual language. She is currently an Honorary Creative Fellow of the State Library of Victoria, examining photographs relating to Ebenezer, Ramahyuck and Lake Tyers Aboriginal missions. A book about colonial photography on the Victorian missions, emphasising the role of Indigenous people will be published in 2004 by Duke University Press. She is currently (2003-2005) working in collaboration with the Indigenous community on an interdisciplinary project at Ebenezer Mission, north-western Victoria, which will draw from neglected visual and material sources in reconstructing the visual regimes and embodied experiences that structured Indigenous-white encounters in south-eastern Australia . Analysis of photographic archives and archaeological investigation of this key site in the colonial encounter will address how everyday life on the mission was experienced by different social groups, the role of gender organisation within the colonial process, and how Aboriginal cultural identity was shaped by missionisation.

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