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         European (eastern) Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Urbanization Mediterranean (Acta Hyperborea) by Damgaard Andersen, 1997-01
  2. Harvesting the Sea Farming the Forest (Sheffield Archaeological Monographs)
  3. In the Field: The Archaeological Expeditions of the Kelsey Museum by Lauren E. Talalay, Susan E. Alcock, 2006-08-20
  4. Landscapes in Flux (Colloquia Pontica, 3) by J. Chapman, P. Dolukhanov, 1997-12-15
  5. In the Wake of a Woman: The Pioneering of North-eastern Scania, Sweden, 10,000-5000 Bc: the +rup Settlements
  6. Stranger in the Valley of the Kings (Paladin Books) by Ahmed Osman, 1994-02
  7. Neo-Babylonian Texts in the Oriental Institute Collection (University of Chicago Oriental Institute Publications) by David B. Weisberg, 2004-03
  8. Nationalizing a Borderland: War, Ethnicity, and Anti-Jewish Violence in East Galicia, 1914-1920 (Judaic Studies Series) by Alexander V. Prusin, 2005-08-21
  9. Thracians (Ancient Peoples and Places) by Ralph F. Hoddinott, 1981-02
  10. Social World of Batavia: European and Eurasian in Dutch Asia by Jean Gelman Taylor, 1984-01
  11. Enemies from the East?: V. S. Soloviev on Paganism, Asian Civilizations, and Islam (SRLT)
  12. Historic North Queensferry (Scottish Burgh Surveys) by Patricia Dennison, 2001-09
  13. Historic Forfar: The Archaeological Implications of Development (Scottish Burgh Survey (Series).) by E. Patricia Dennison, Patricia Dennison, et all 2001-09
  14. Albania Today: A Portrait of Post-Communist Turbulence by Clarissa de Waal, 2005-09-17

81. University Of Texas
Introduction to Archaeological Studies Prehistoric archaeology records fromMiddle (eastern) countries housed in the Population Center at the University.
http://fp.arizona.edu/mesassoc/Directory/Texas.htm
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
Austin, Texas Program

Center for Middle Eastern Studies

Program Center for Middle Eastern Studies
Degrees Offered
Center for Middle Eastern Studies:
BA, MA in Middle Eastern Studies
Joint graduate degrees with Business, Communication, Law, Library and Information Science, or Public Affairs.
Middle East Languages
Arabic (Modern Standard, Elementary through Advanced, and Colloquial Levantine)
Hebrew (Modern Israeli, Elementary through Advanced, and Biblical) Persian (Standard, Elementary through Advanced Avaston, Old Persian, Pahlavi) Turkish (Elementary through Advanced) Aramaic Hittite Courses Anthropology Race and Ethnicity in the Middle East Fundamentals of Folklore Migration: The Case of Germany Introduction to African Pre-History Bodylore Photos of First Generation Immigrants Art, Politics and Identity Class and Gender in the Middle East Religion and Society in the Middle East Peoples and Cultures of the Middle East Middle Eastern Magic, Religion, and Lore Jewish Folklore Films: An Anthropological Perspective The Cultural Construction of Masculinity Body Theory Anthropology of Islam Colonialism and Post-Colonialism in the Middle East Archaeology Ceramic Technology Introduction to Archaeological Analysis Fundamentals of Field Archaeology Introduction to Archaeological Studies: Prehistoric Archaeology Introduction to Archaeological Studies: Egypt, Near East, Greece, and Rome

82. ESF-COST European Project COST A27 Members' CVs K-O
She has worked as a research fellow at the Institute of archaeology, UCL, I was also one of the coordinators of another european-funded project,
http://www.soc.staffs.ac.uk/jdw1/costa27memberscvsko.html
COST A27
Understanding pre-industrial structures in rural and mining landscapes
(LANDMARKS)
Members' CVs
Press the initial letter of the surname of the COST A27 Member you require
K
L M N ... O
Vasiliki Kassianidou - CYPRUS
Web site: http://www.ucy.ac.cy/isa/biografika/kassianidou.htm
PROFILE
She has been teaching at the University of Cyprus since 1994.
She has worked as a research fellow at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL, (1993).
Graduate studies at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London (Ph.D. in Archaeometallurgy, 1993). Undergraduate studies at Bryn Mawr College, USA (B.A. in Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology and Chemistry, 1989). RESEARCH INTERESTS Her research interests include: extractive metallurgy, ancient technology, conservation of metals, production and trade of Cypriot copper in Antiquity. RESEARCH PROJECTS AND COLLABORATIONS WITH OTHER UNIVERSITIES, RESEARCH CENTRES ETC. Digital Map of Palaepaphos (2002 - Today) The aim of this research project is to create a digital map of the area of the ancient kingdom of Palaepaphos with the help of GIS, by determining the exact location of the ancient monuments of the area using a high precision GPS. At the same time we are creating a database of all the archaeological sites in the area, which will be linked with all the geographical data. Project Members: M. Iacovou, V. Kassianidou, G. Papasavvas (Department of History and Archaeology), A. Sarris (Institute of Mediterranean Studies, FORTH, Crete), Ch. Zenonos, M. Savvides, A. Hadjiraftis (Department of Lands and Surveys), A. Andreou (Department of Computer Science), and Stratos Stylianidis.

83. CEECS: Central And Eastern European Classical Scholarship
Central and (eastern) european Classical Scholarship, News, Contributions, Projects *Lists of major archaeological sites and field research centers.
http://www.ceecs.net/
Central and Eastern European Classical Scholarship News Contributions Projects Updates About Quick Links: Changed Pages The State of Classical Study by Country Programs Classicists Academies Serials Museums and Libraries Associations Reviews Letters to the Editor Editorial Staff CEECS Publications in CB Conferences Contact Us Classical Bulletin Books: Classical Latin Classical Greek Gilgamesh Epic Slavic Studies WELCOME TO CEECS, a website intended to serve, in simple and compact form, as a clearing house for information on Central and East European Classical Scholarship since the end of World War II. The countries covered will be the lands of the former Soviet Union (The Russian Federation, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan), Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Yugoslavia ( The following are the kinds of items, by country, that will appear on the website: *Reviews of monographs, editions and translations of Classical texts , and journal volumes.

84. Anthropology Periodical Titles
Anthropology, archaeology and Area Studies Periodicals Online East EuropeanPolitics Societies * Edebiyat Journal of Middle (eastern) Literatures
http://library.fortlewis.edu/reference/subjects/anthroacadtitles.asp
Anthropology, Archaeology and Area Studies Periodicals Online
(* indicates full text available online) Wilson Omnifile Fulltext Select Academic Search Premier (EBSCO)

85. Hunter College Anthropology - Selected WWW Links
(eastern) States Archaeological Federation US european Association for Middle(eastern) Studies NO european Association of Archaeologists UK
http://maxweber.hunter.cuny.edu/anthro/associations.html
Featured Site: Celebration of Women Anthropologists
http://www.cas.usf/edu/anthropology/women/index.html

Featured Site: Taino.org for Carribbean Archaeology
http://www.taino.org

African Studies Association [US]
African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific [AU]
Alaska Anthropological Association [US]
American Anthropological Association [US]
American Association of Anthropological Genetics
American Association of Physical Anthropologists
American Board of Forensic Anthropology [US] American Committee for the Preservation of Archaeological Collections [US] American Cultural Resources Association [US] American Ethnological Society [US] American Oriental Society [US] American Schools of Oriental Research [US] American Society of Primatologists [US] Ancient Egypt Studies Association [US] Anthropological Association of Ireland [IE] Anthropological Society of Nippon [JP] Anthropological Society of Western Australia [AU] Anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien [AT] Arbeitsgemeinschaft Ethnomedizin [DE] Arbeitsgemeinschaft Theorie (T-AG) [DE] Arbeitsgruppe Archäologie und Informatik [CH] Arbeitsgruppe für experimentelle Archäologie der Schweiz [CH] Archaeological and Anthropological Society of Victoria [AU] Archaeological Institute of America [US] Archaeological Remote Sensing Consortium [US] Archaeological Society of British Columbia [CA] Archaeological Society of Maryland [US] Archaeological Society of North Carolina [US] Archaeological Society of South Carolina [US] Arizona Archaeological Council [US]

86. NordArk / Publishers - List Of European Publishers Of Archaeology
Subject Index / A archaeology / General, Methods and Theory, Middle and NearEastern archaeology, european archaeology, American archaeology.
http://www.hgo.se/nordark/publish2.htm
List of European publishers
Updated 2003-07-01 This is a selection of European publishers which publish work on North European archaeology. The majority of the listed publishers are commercial. They are ordered alphabetically by name. Note that some publishers want customers to register before they can order online. List of publishers and publishers' catalogues
Facts about publishers and publishing
A B ... E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A Archaeopress UK
Publisher of British Archaeological Reports
URL: http://www.archaeopress.com
Searchable online catalogue
Literature can be ordered by fax, e-mail or post. Archetype Publications UK
Publisher and bookseller on conservation, museum studies and archaeology
URL: http://www.archetype.co.uk/
Alphabetical lists of forthcoming and published works. Literature is ordered by fax, e-mail or post. Up B Blackwell Publishing UK URL: http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/ Subject navigation: Subject Index / A - Archaeology / General, Methods and Theory, Middle and Near Eastern Archaeology, European Archaeology, American Archaeology. Searchable online catalogue

87. Official Website Of Paris Sorbonne University - Paris IV
Graduate school (ED) VI History of art and archaeology Western europeanarchaeology and the history of Western european art, from Ancient Greece to
http://www.paris4.sorbonne.fr/en/article.php3?id_article=267

88. Institute Of Archaeology UCL
archaeology, place and local people A study on the relationship between local Consumption, reception and influence of Near (eastern) imports in the
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/student-research/topics.htm
Accessibility Privacy Advanced Search Help SEARCH
THE INSTITUTE
OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Introduction
Contacting Us
Undergraduates
Graduate Students ...
Institute Intranet
Graduate Student Research Topics
This is list of some of the topics being researched by our current Graduate Research students.
Who:
Topic:
Keywords:
Carolyn Graves-Brown The ideological significance of Egyptian Dynastic lithics Egypt, lithics, dynastic, religion Quetta Kaye Ritual drug use, material culture and the social context of power in the prehistoric Caribbean. Jocelyn Kimmel A technical study of historic Islamic plaster and coloured glass windows, looking at manufacture, deterioration, materials characterisation, creation of cleaning and conservation methodology gypsum, glass, conservation, Islamic decorative arts, Cairo, Iran, India,
museums Carol Bell Late Bronze Age and Iron Age Trade in the Eastern Mediterranean theory of trade, Mycenaean and Cypriote pottery, copper, tin, Ugarit

89. Archaeology Of Computing In Russia - Intersections And Parallels
archaeology of Computing in Russia Intersections and Parallels in EuropeanComputing - the (eastern) Perspective. Lectures given at the transmediale.03
http://netzspannung.org/cat/servlet/CatServlet?cmd=netzkollektor&subCommand=show

90. The Great DNA Hunt
Genetic archaeology zooms in on the origins of modern humans. African,european, and Indian cattle were all thought to be descended from a domesticated
http://www.archaeology.org/9609/abstracts/dna.html
Your browser does not support javascript The Great DNA Hunt Volume 49 Number 5, September/October 1996 by Tabitha M. Powledge and Mark Rose Genetic archaeology zooms in on the origins of modern humans. (Illustration by Carlyn Iverson) [LARGER IMAGE] DNA can be used to understand the evolution of modern humans, trace migrations of people, identify individuals, and determine the origins of domestic plants and animals. DNA analysis, as one scholar put it, is "the greatest archaeological excavation of all time." Because ancient DNA molecules are normally so few and fragmented, and preserved soft tissues so rare, scientists had little hope of finding and analyzing it. But two breakthroughs have made this possible: the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a method for copying any fragment of DNA, and the successful recovery of DNA from preserved hard tissues, bones and teeth, that are durable and relatively abundant. DNA analysis traced human ancestry back to an African "Eve," setting off debate about how modern humans evolved. While there was general agreement that Homo erectus dispersed from Africa across Asia between 1 and 2 million years ago, what happened next remained a question. The "out-of-Africa" hypothesis contended that modern humans developed in Africa and migrated from there recently, driving

91. ANCH Faculty List
Professor, Classical Studies, Ancient Greek and Anatolian archaeology; Greek social Barry Eichler, Associate Professor, Asian and Middle (eastern) Studies
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/anch/faculty.html
Faculty of the Graduate Group in Ancient History:
Table of Contents
Current Faculty in ANCH
Name Department Specialty e-mail Rita Copeland Professor, Classical Studies Medieval studies; comparative literature rcopelan@sas.upenn.edu Edward E. Cohen Adjunct Professor, Classical Studies Athenian Economy and Society ecohen@resourceamerica.com Keith DeVries. Professor, Classical Studies Ancient Greek and Anatolian archaeology; Greek social history kdevries@sas.upenn.edu Barry Eichler Associate Professor, Asian and Middle Eastern Studies Akkadian, Assyriology beichler@sas.upenn.edu Joseph Farrell Professor, Classical Studies Greek and Roman literature; Roman culture and cultural studies; Vergilian and Ovidian studies jfarrell@classics.upenn.edu Lothar Haselberger Professor, History of Art Greek and Roman architecture; theory of classical architecture; Rome's topography and urban development haselber@sas.upenn.edu Fredrik Hiebert Professor, Anthropology Archaeology and anthropology of central Asia; ancient trade hiebert@sas.upenn.edu

92. History On_Line: SAGE Journals - European Journal Of Archaeology
Sage Publishing. european Journal of archaeology 14619571. The european Journalof archaeology seeks to promote open debate amongst archaeologists
http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Resources/Books/14619571.html
Browse material from: Sage Publishing European Journal of Archaeology
The European Journal of Archaeology seeks to promote open debate amongst archaeologists committed to a new idea of Europe in which there is more communication across national frontiers and more interest in interpretation. All periods are covered. Covering all time periods, the journal includes not only new empirical data and new interpretations of the past but also encourages debate about the role archaeology plays in society, how it should be organized in a changing Europe, and the ethics of archaeological practice. Each issue of the European Journal of Archaeology now includes an expanded Reviews Section. As well as Book Reviews, this section will feature Review Articles, Journal Reviews and Conference Reports. It will cover topics affecting current academic debate, as well as those involving heritage and museum management, and will include publications from all fields of archaeology. Three times per year: April, August, December
Editorial
Mark Pearce Volume 07 - Issue 1 - pp. 5-8 - 1 April 2004

93. British Archaeology, No 45, June 1999: Places
A research project is also under way at the Museum of London archaeology London lay within trading and cultural zones which were european in scale not
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba45/ba45regs.html
ISSN 1357-4442 Editor: Simon Denison
Issue no 45, June 1999
PLACES
When London became a European capital
By 1300, the character of England's principal city was established, writes John Schofield A recent upward revision of the size of London's population around 1300 to 80,000 or more has fundamentally changed our understanding of the size and importance of the medieval city within England and in Europe. The city had grown from its rebirth under King Alfred in the late 9th century. Archaeologists are beginning to fill in the details of the picture of its development, especially from the early 11th century when several designated waterfront docking places were laid out near the markets. From the opening of the 12th century (if not before) stone houses, prominent public buildings and a new cathedral were built. London bridge was rebuilt in 1176-1209 and Guildhall was probably established during the 12th century. Historians at the Centre for Metropolitan History at the University of London have recently shown that by 1300, also, London began to dominate the agricultural practices of a large and growing hinterland as a result of its demand for basic foodstuffs and fuel. The intramural city grew by as much as one sixth at the expense of the river, through a process of reclamation, between about 1100 and about 1450. This process has been recorded on many sites since the 1970s. A succession of wooden revetments has been found, surviving up to 2m high, and dated by dendrochronology to the period 1140-1480. The joints are comparable to other examples of medieval carpentry, and so detailed is the evidence that it allows us to reconstruct much of the history of timber framing in this period.

94. European Religions
Apart from the invasions of various european tribes into each others The 1960s also saw a growth in interest in (eastern) religions such as Taoism and
http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/encyclopedia/europe/geness.html
European Religions
The religious history of Europe was was particularly complex before Christianity firmly established itself, a process which was ongoing until relatively recent times in some areas. Before the spread of Christianity, each country had its own indigenous religious traditions, sometimes maintained in isolation but in more accessible regions absorbing influences introduced by trading and successive waves of invasion. The 1st millennium BCE saw the expansion of the Celtic peoples throughout Europe, reaching as far north as Britain by 450 BCE to be followed by incursions by pre-Christian Germanic tribes such as the Angles, Saxons and Jutes, during the first millennium CE. In 55 CE the Romans invaded Britain, pushing the Celts to the Western fringe of Europe (Ireland, Wales, Scotland, Cornwall, Brittany). The Roman Empire spread pre-Christian religions such as Mithraism and the Imperial cult throughout Europe, before also facilitating the spread of Christianity. A contemporary organisation of the Theosophical Society , The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a magical order founded in Great Britain in 1888, brought together influences from Freemasonry, the Jewish Kabbalah, ceremonial magic modernised from the Renaissance, and the latest archaeological research concerning religion in Egypt, Greece and Rome, as well as customs and folklore native to the British Isles. This was the first introduction of Classical Mediterranean religions as practical traditions into modern day Europe.

95. Andrew W. Mellon East-Central European Research Fellows - Romania
2000, AAR, Coriolan, Oprean, Institute of archaeology and History of Art 2004, WSK, Theodor, Paleologu, european College of Liberal Arts, Berlin
http://www.caorc.org/fellowships/mellon/fellows/romania.html
Andrew W. Mellon East-Central European Research Fellows
ROMANIA Year Center First Name Last Name Home Institution Position Discipline Project Title WSK Ungureanu Dr. History ARIT Viorel Panaite University of Bucharest - Centre For Byzantine And South-East Studies "Gheorghe Bratianu" Doctor History Ottoman Law of Peace and War. A Comparative Study of the Relations between the Porte and the Tributary States in Southeastern Europe (15th-17th Centuries) ASCSA Alexandru Avram University of Bucharest Associate Lecturer Greek Archaeology, Epigraphy and Ceramic Epigraphy Megara and its Colonies ASCSA Niculae Conovici Institute of Archaeology, Bucharest Lecturer Classical Archaeology Histria VII. Les Timbres Amphoriques IASH Andreea Deciu University of Bucharest - Department of Literary Theory Teaching Assistant European Literature Voyage to the Self: Travelogues and Theories of Identity in 18th Century England MSH Mirela-Luminita Murgescu Histoire/Anthropologie sociale WAR Maria Craciun Cluj University Senior Lecturer History Cult of Saints in Transylvanian Polyptych Altars WSK Valentina Sandu-Dediu Academy of Music Bucharest Dr.

96. ARCANE Project - Presentation
Our knowledge of the archaeology of each area has much increased, Its geographicalscope covers the entire (eastern) Mediterranean and Near (eastern) area,
http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/arcane/presentation.html
ARCANE Project
Presentation of the ARCANE Project
1. Scientific Background
A Brief History of the Project
Chronology underpins all archaeological and historical studies. To establish the proper sequence of events is a prerequisite condition for writing history. The synchronization of chronologies, and therefore of histories, of the various areas of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Near East is an essential task without which the development of civilizations, their reciprocal influences, their merger and divergence, cannot be described and understood. As a result, disagreements between specialists are numerous and profound, controversies frequent and uncertainties general. In particular, different scholars may sometimes use the same term to designate a period to which they ascribe a different archaeological definition and time span. In such extreme cases, scholarly communication is jeopardized. To remedy this situation, specialists of the second millennium in Egypt and the Levant have resolved in the last decade to intensify international cooperation in the framework of a project geared to the solution of major chronological problems. But nothing has been done yet to establish on solid grounds the chronology of the third millennium BC in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Near East and to propose an overall synchronization of its various cultures.

97. NES -- Faculty Roster
Sanjyot Mehendale, Lecturer in Near (eastern) archaeology. Near (eastern) archaeology.Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley
http://neareastern.berkeley.edu/docs/roster.html
Faculty Roster
A directory showing faculty office phone and room numbers is also available. Department Office: 250 Barrows Hall, 642-3757. Chair: Daniel Boyarin.

Hamid Algar
, Professor of Near Eastern Studies Persian Literature. Islamic culture, religion, philosophy; Sufism and the Qur'an. Ph.D. Cambridge University Robert B. Alter , (Class of 1937 Professor), Professor of Hebrew and Comparative Literature. Hebrew literature, modern and biblical. Ph.D. Harvard University Ariel Bloch (Emeritus), Professor of Arabic and Semitics. Arabic dialectology, Hebrew. Ph.D. Munster University Daniel Boyarin , Chair of Near Eastern Studies, (Herman P. and Sophia Taubman Professor of Talmudic Culture). Cultural studies in Talmud and Midrash; gender and sexuality; hermeneutics; ancient Judaism and Christianity. Ph.D. Jewish Theological Seminary William M. Brinner (Emeritus, Recipient of Distinguished Teaching Award). Islamic institutions: Arabic, Judeo-Arabic. Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley Wolfgang J. Heimpel

98. Archaeology Graduate Programs Outside U.S.A.
MA inÊarchaeology european Prehistoric archaeology The department of NearEastern archaeology comprises the archaeology of the Levant, Palestine,
http://www.gradschools.com/listings/out/archaeology_out.html
ARCHAEOLOGY
Graduate Schools Outside the United States
Sponsoring Institutions:
Center for International Studies
Click here for information on becoming a sponsoring institution
General Listings:
American Unversity of Beirut
Faculty of Arts and Sciences
Archaeology
P.O.Box 11-236
Beirut, Lebanon
Click to send E-mail to:
Phone:
Fax:
Degrees Offered:

M.A. - Archaeology
Archaeology Ankara, Turkey Fax: Degrees Offered: M.A.-Protohistory and Near Eastern Archaeology; Ph.D.-Protohistory and Near Eastern Archaeology; M.A. -Classical Archaeology; Ph.D.-Classical Archaeology; M.A.-Prehistoria; Ph.D.-Prehistoria Bilkent University Archaeology and History of Art Office of the Dean Ankara, 06533 Turkey Click to send E-mail to: Phone: Fax: Degrees Offered: M.A. - Archaeology and History of Art C.I.S. - Center for International Studies Northampton, MA 01060 USA Click to send E-mail to: Phone: 1-413-582-0407 Toll Free 1-877-617-9090 Fax: "For students living in the U.S. and Canada, regardless of citizenship". CIS, the Center for International Studies, is an official representative for 17 internationally recognized universities in Australia, England, Ireland, New Zealand and Scotland. We will assist you with applying to and enrolling at any of our partner universities by providing the following services: application processing, visa assistance (US only), financial aid counseling, pre-departure advising and travel arrangement advice. All of these personalized services are provided to you at no charge-you pay only the direct university costs. Think of us as your personal admissions officer right here in the U.S.A!

99. Athena Review 3,2: The Eastern Abenaki At The Contact Period (AD 1500-1625)
The (eastern) Abenaki are comprised of several closely related By the time ofEuropean arrival in the northeast in the 16th and 17th centuries AD,
http://www.athenapub.com/eabenaki.htm
free trial issue subscribe back issues
Athena Review,Vol.3, no.2: Peopling of the Americas
The Eastern Abenaki at the Contact Period (AD 1500-1625)
Subsistence: Primarily hunter-gatherers, the Abenaki also practiced limited horticulture, and cultivated maize by about AD 1000 (with the Kennebec River marking the northernmost soil and climatic conditions suitable for maize growing). They lived along the coast in larger groups during the warm months and dispersed inland as smaller family units during the winter, utilizing at specific seasons many different wild food resources including fish, shellfish, porpoises, seals, moose, deer, beaver, rabbit, woodchuck, wild fruits, and tubers. Domesticated dogs helped the Abenaki track game. Stone tools, shell beads, and shell-tempered and cord-marked pottery are well known archaeological finds of their manufactures (fig.1). Fig.1: Excavations at the south end of the storehouse at Maine's Popham Colony (built in 1607-1608) reveal probable Eastern Abenaki artifacts and occupational features including hearths ( Brain 1999 Contact with Europeans: Brief and possibly tense encounters took place between the Abenaki and Verrazano Popham Colony [References: Brain, , Jeffrey P. 1999.

100. Andrew W. Mellon East-Central European Research Fellows - Czech Republic
The Challenge for Central european Countries AIAR, W. F. Albright Instituteof Archaeological Research. AIIS, American Institute of Indian Studies
http://www.caorc.org/fellowships/mellon/fellows/czech_republic.html
Andrew W. Mellon East-Central European Research Fellows
CZECH REPUBLIC Year Center First Name Last Name Home Institution Position Discipline Project Title AAR Jan Bazant Charles University, Prague - Institute for Classical Studies Professor Art History Book: Classical Inspiration in Czech Architecture MSH Zdenek Konopasek Charles University, Prague - Institute of Political Science Sociologie de la famille/Politique sociale Welfare State Aesthetics: Post-modern Theorizing the Welfare State - Social Security Schemes as Institution Representations of Reality NIAS Jana Czech Language Institute
Linguistics Title not provided WAR Roman Zaoral Palacky University, Olomouc Assistant Lecturer History The Activity of Czech Students and Intellectuals Abroad, 14C.-16C. AAR Jiri Kropacek Charles University, Prague Associate Professor Art History Research on Francesco Terzios 16th Century Court ASCSA Jan Bouzek Charles University, Prague

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