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         Archaeology:     more books (99)
  1. The Letter and the Scroll: What Archaeology Tells Us About the Bible by Robin Currie, Stephen Hyslop, 2009-11-17
  2. Archaeology as Human Ecology: Method and Theory for a Contextual Approach by Karl W. Butzer, 1982-05-31
  3. The Archaeology of Liberty in an American Capital: Excavations in Annapolis by Mark Leone, 2005-12-29
  4. Hands-On Archaeology: Real-Life Activities for Kids by John R. White, 2005-09-01
  5. X Marks the Spot: The Archaeology of Piracy (New Perspectives on Maritime History and Nautical Archaeology)
  6. The Aegean Bronze Age (Cambridge World Archaeology) by Oliver Dickinson, 1994-05-27
  7. Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and the Antiquities Trade (Cultural Heritage Studies)
  8. Maritime Archaeology (New Studies in Archaeology) by Keith Muckelroy, 1979-02-28
  9. Discovering Our Past: A Brief Introduction to Archaeology by Wendy Ashmore, Robert Sharer, 2009-04-22
  10. Untimely Ruins: An Archaeology of American Urban Modernity, 1819-1919 by Nick Yablon, 2010-02-01
  11. Doing Archaeology in the Land of the Bible: A Basic Guide by John D. Currid, 1999-08-01
  12. The HarperCollins Visual Guide to the New Testament: What Archaeology Reveals about the First Christians by Jonathan L. Reed, 2007-11-01
  13. The Treasury of Ancient Egypt Miscellaneous Chapters on Ancient Egyptian History and Archaeology by Arthur E. P. B. Weigall, 2009-10-04
  14. The World Encyclopedia of Archaeology: The World's Most Significant Sites and Cultural Treasures

81. Journal Of Field Archaeology
Welcome to the Journal of Field archaeology home page at Boston University. JFA Contact Addresses Click on any of the following topics for information.
http://www.bu.edu/jfa/
Jun 2005
We have resumed placing abstracts onto the web site and are caught up through Volume 20 Number 2 (Summer 2005) which will ship 03 Jul 2005. Welcome to the Journal of Field Archaeology home page at Boston University
JFA Contact Addresses

Click on any of the following topics for information.
"The Antiquities Market" returns! After a hiatus of a decade, the section of the JFA devoted to the illicit trade in antiquities is now under the editorship of Christina Luke and Morag Kersel.
Their first contribution A Retrospective and a Look Forward
will appear in Volume 30, Number 2 (2005) on pages 191200
Subscribe!
to the Journal of Field Archaeology. The rates for Volume 30 (2005) have increased in response to rising production costs. The new rates are $35 for students, $60 for individuals, and $75 for institiutions. JFA is now on JSTOR
Those who subscribe to JSTOR now have access to a complete run of back issues, from Volume 1 (1974) through Volume 27 (2001). JSTOR will maintain a three-year "rolling wall" so that when Volume 30 (2005) is complete, Volume 28 will appear on that web site. April 2005
We have returned to a quarterly schedule of production after several years of double issues.

82. Industrial Archaeology & History Ring
The ring contains sites of interest to industrial archaeologists and industrial historians.
http://s.webring.com/hub?ring=iahring&id=96&hub

83. School Of Art History, Cinema, Classics & Archaeology
Offers art history courses including architecture. Gives details of courses available, staff and research, and an AZ guide of the school.
http://www.sfca.unimelb.edu.au/
You are here: Arts School AHCCA
Art History
Art Curatorship Art Conservation Cinema Studies ...
Contact Us

The School has a range of art history, curatorship, conservation, cinema studies, classical studies and archaeology subjects unparalleled in Australia. It has excellent new facilities situated in the Elisabeth Murdoch Building and University Quadrangle.
The diverse disciplines are all concerned with the interpretation of visual cultures and material objects from past and present civilizations.
The School is further strengthened by its association with the Ian Potter Museum of Art and Conservation Centre . Curatorial courses and postgraduate research in conservation are two important growth areas that reflect the School's stimulating alliance with the Ian Potter Museum of Art.
Affiliated with the Art History program is the Fine Arts Network , which organises l ectures, functions and activities dealing with art and art history, including the the Joseph Burke and Margaret Manion lectures.
The Fine Arts Network (FAN)
publishes Melbourne Art Journal , a refereed art history journal, and E-MAJ , an on-line postgraduate art history journal.

84. Perseus Art & Archaeology
This database includes information and pictures on architecture, sculpture, coins, pottery, and special topics.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/art&arch.html
Perseus Tufts Collections: Classics Papyri Renaissance London ... Support Perseus
Art and Archaeology
e-mail us problems and comments Look through a massive library of art objects, sites, and buildings. The library's catalogs document 523 coins, 1548 vases, over 1400 sculptures, 179 sites and 381 buildings. Each catalog entry has a description of the object and its context; most have images. This web site currently publishes over 33,000 pictures! Descriptions and images have been produced in collaboration with many museums, institutions and scholars. Catalog information and keywords have been taken from standard sources, which are cited in the entries for each object.
(See some examples to get you started.) For a great introduction to the Greek world, check out Thomas Martin's Overview of Archaic and Classical Greek History . This work contains over 3000 links to Perseus' primary materials and is also available as a book from Yale University Press . Also check out highlights of the Perseus Web site.
Catalogs of sites, buildings, and objects

85. Maritime Archaeology MA
MA graduate program in maritime archaeology and history. This masters course offers training in the practical and theoretical approaches to maritime archaeology, nautical archaeology, maritime history, boat archaeology and underwater archaeology.
http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/Archaeology/graduate/maritime.html
Maritime Archaeology - MA Maritime Archaeology at Bristol. The website for the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology at the Univeristy of Bristol has moved to: http://www.bris.ac.uk/archanth/ Please update any links to our pages with these new links:
Maritime Archaeology

About the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology

Department of Archaeology and Anthropology staff

Department of Archaeology and Anthropology undergraduate degrees
...
Department of Archaeology and Anthropology news and events

You will be redirected to the new address. If you see this message for more than 5 seconds, please click on the link above.

86. Journal Of Roman Archaeology
An international journal publishing book reviews, articles and research findings in the field of Roman archaeology. Contents and sample articles.
http://www.journalofromanarch.com/
An international journal printing contributions in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish; specializing in synthetic articles and in long reviews. General editor and publisher,
J.H. Humphrey Order direct by e-mail:
jra@journalofromanarch.com
Special offers to individuals on all titles

Do you wish to make your own photocopy of a JRA work?
Do you need a photocopy of an article or review
For subscriptions, book reviews, articles, supplements or general inquiries, kindly contact:
The Editor, JRA, 95 Peleg Road,
Portsmouth, Rhode Island 02871 U.S.A.
Telephone: 401-683-1955;
Telefax: 401-683-1975; E-mail: jra@journalofromanarch.com Submission Guidelines Editorial/advisory committees, and statement of purpose JRA submission guidelines : download the JRA Stylesheet How to send digital images
Journal of Roman Archaeology volume 17 (2004) in two fascicules was published and mailed in the first half of November 2004. Click here for the Table of Contents.
Click to read sample from JRA 16: Hetty Joyce, " The dal Pozzo brothers' collection of drawings of Roman mosaics and wall-paintings
Price to individual subscribers: $59.75 + post List price: $120 + post
Latest Books Received: through July 2004 Sample review from Vol. 15 is available here:

87. Australian Historical Studies
A refereed journal based at the University of Melbourne dealing with Australian, New Zealand, and Pacific regional heritage, archaeology, and history. Includes archives, selected reviews, style sheet, and editorial board listing.
http://www.ahs.unimelb.edu.au/

Home

Editorial Board

Subscriptions

Recent Issues
...
Style Sheet
Australian Historical Studies
Australian Historical Studies is a refereed journal dealing with Australian, New Zealand and Pacific regional issues. First published in 1940, it is now one of Australia's oldest and best known academic journals, receiving contributions from leading academics in the field. The journal welcomes contributions bearing upon any aspect of the Australian past, including the recent past. We value reflective comment on the recreation of that past in the present, in all its forms - heritage and conservation, archaeology, visual display in museums and galleries, oral history, family history and histories of place as well more academic studies. Contributions on significant historical subjects of general interest to the readers and practitioners of Australian history are also welcome. Australian Historical Studies is published biannually by the University of Melbourne in April and October each year and is supported by the Faculty of Arts. It is also supported by the Faculties of Arts of Monash University, La Trobe University, Victoria University of Technology and the Faculty of Art, Design and Communication, RMIT. Articles, reviews, books for review and related correspondence should be sent to the Editor at the address below.
The Editorial Board gratefully acknowledges the generosity of its sponsors, Dr Anthea Hyslop and Mr Justice Mullaly. New sponsors (those making an annual donation to the journal of $200, which includes the year's subscription) would be most welcome.

88. Archaeology, School Of Humanities, University Of Southampton
Online archaeology Journal. Research project in Hungary. In 1993/4 at Southampton University we were amongst the first archaeology departments worldwide
http://avebury.arch.soton.ac.uk/Journal/journal.html
The browser you are using does not fully support the latest web standards. Although you will still be able to access the information on this site, you may not be getting the most from it, or the rest of the internet. Find out more...
Welcome
Search for courses
Information about...
Online Archaeology - Journal
In 1993/4 at Southampton University we were amongst the first Archaeology departments worldwide to establish an online archaeological journal and indeed one of the first with any form of substantial web presence. Since then we have continued to develop and support innovative multimedia projects include web development, online GIS and database systems, multimedia interfaces, and computer graphics. The following linked pages provide an archive of the journal 'Online Archaeology', offering a snapshot of this initial phase of what has now become a consistent and vital part of archaeological practice. Read the Journal >>> Contact the archaeology web editors Contact Us

89. CUMAA Error
Part of the Faculty of archaeology and Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. Exhibitions, collections, online catalogue.
http://cumaa.archanth.cam.ac.uk/museum.html
WEB PAGES HAVE MOVED For the new Museum web pages follow this link and update your bookmarks file: New Museum Web Pages Thank you for your patience

90. The BibArch Home Page
encounter their ancient cultures, and learn more of biblical archaeology. Use the resources of this site to learn how archaeology illuminates biblical
http://www.bibarch.com/
Search Site
Contents

Overview

Levantine Fieldwork
... Click here to send us Questions or Comments
High Top Media
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BIBARCH — The Premier Biblical
Archaeology Website Welcomes you to the intriguing World of Biblical Archaeology We intend for B IB A RCH™ to be your guide as you explore the world of the bible. We seek to provide you with timely, reliable, and insightful information for extending your understanding of the bible, its archaeology, and the biblical world. Here you can visit the bible lands, develop new insights into the meaning of the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament. At B IB A RCH™ you can learn of the cultures of ancient biblical peoples, consider the worldviews of the servants and prophets of God, and extend your understanding of the life and times of the first Christians and the early church. Our intent is to assist all seeking to extend their knowledge in biblical archaeology, desiring to become avocational or professional archaeologists, or wanting to do archaeological fieldwork in the lands of the Bible. You can use the resources of this website to enhance your awareness of the archaeology of the Bible lands. Learn how archaeological research illuminates the biblical text and broaden your understanding of the biblical world and its peoples. We provide a means for you to further explore the archaeology of the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament.

91. Wessex Archaeology
This nonprofit-making body based near Salisbury is one of the biggest archaeological practices in the country. Services include maritime archaeology.
http://www.wessexarch.co.uk/
Home Commercial Services Projects Learning ... Wessex Archaeology
is one of the largest and most experienced archaeological practices in the UK, offering a complete range of commercial and specialist services. Read more about us.. Our Website
You will find information about the projects we work on, learning resources, specialist reports, multimedia features and much more. Learning
We are a registered charity with educational objectives, and play a vital role in helping people learn about their past. Visit our learning section to find out more. Commercial Services
Offering the most diverse range of archaeological services to cater for all types and scales of project. London Office
Find out about Wessex Archaeology in London.
Read more...
Across the UK
Wessex Archaeology work across the UK and abroad. Visit our projects section to find out more about our work. WA Worldwide
To find out about Wessex Archaeology's impact upon the world's press, visit our Media Review 2003 Contact Us
Email info@wessexarch.co.uk

92. School Of History, Classics And Archaeology - Birkbeck, University Of London
Undergraduate courses and higher degrees, online prospectus, staff, societies, events, and information for international students.
http://www.bbk.ac.uk/hca/
Home About us Programmes Staff ... Contact us School of History, Classics and Archaeology
***NEW MA TIMETABLE FOR 2005/06******
05/06 MA Course Choice Forms 05/06 MA Handbooks *NEW* BA Handbooks 2005-6 Undergraduate Options 2005-6
UPDATED 02.08.05 2005/06 Undergraduate Application form 2005/06 Postgraduate/MPhil /PhD Application form **NEW MA for 2005/06 in the History of Ideas click here to find out more information 2005/06 Provisional MA Timetable 2004/05 MA Research Skills Timetable Please ensure that we have the correct email address for you! Back to top BBK Home About BBK Search

93. Queer Archaeology
and analysis of ancient grafitti and inscriptions.......
http://home.earthlink.net/~ekerilaz/archaeo.html
Queer Archaeology and Anthropology I have always loved archaeology and helped my parents on a dig in Texas when I was a small child. After coming out of the closet, I lived for several years in Moab, Utah and explored Anasazi and Fremont ruins all over the Colorado Plateau ecosystem. I found two ancient petroglyphs (and heard of a third) that apparently depict homosexual activities, which sparked my interest in the possibility of Queer Archaeology.
[Above - petroglyph of two men with erections about to embrace each other, dating to circa 800 CE, located in Hidden Valley just above Moab, Utah; they may have been shamans because they also seem to have animal characteristics like rabbit ears and beaver tails. On the same panel, just below these two ithyphallic men is famous scene of a long line of dancing "Kokopelli" figures.]
[Above - a Late Classic Mayan cave painting and fragmentary hieroplyphs dating to the 700s from Naj Tunich, Guatemala, depicting an older man and a younger man in an erotic embrace, which Dr. Karen Olsen Bruhns of SFSU's Anthropology Dept. calls "the only genuine depiction known of male-male erotic interaction" in the Americas. The younger man (right) sports what seems to be a Lunar Goddess hair lock down his back. Click on image to see photos of the original painting, prior to being vandalized.]

94. ARCHAEOLOGY & PALEONTOLOGY
Front Page Animals Nature archaeology Paleontology Environment History Culture Front Page. archaeology AMP; PALEONTOLOGY
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/archaeology.html
Site Index Subscribe Shop Search Top 15 Most Popular Stories NEWS SPECIAL SERIES RESOURCES Front Page Spear Led to Era of Early-Human Peace, Expert Says The invention of the spear spurred a peaceful era that lasted from roughly one million to 14,000 years ago, one anthropologist says. Extinct Giant Deer Traced to Modern Relative by DNA A huge Ice Age deer with antlers spanning 10 feet (3.5 meters) has been traced to its closest living relative, thanks to DNA science. Early 4-Legged Animal Moved Like Inchworm, Study Says A backbone breakthrough suggests that some of the first terrestrial four-legged animals walked with a scrunching and stretching and strangely galumphing gait. First Chimp Fossils Found; Humans Were Neighbors Researchers have found the first reported chimpanzee fossils in Kenya's Rift Valley. The discovery provides the first physical evidence that chimpanzees coexisted with human ancestors in Africa. Did Huge Volcanic Blasts Snuff Out Dinos?

95. Stolen Stones: The Modern Sack Of Nineveh
Looting of Iraqi archaeological sites since the Gulf War. Illustrated feature by John M. Russell in archaeology includes clickable map of the throne room suite.
http://www.archaeology.org/online/features/nineveh/index.html
Your browser does not support javascript Stolen Stones: The Modern Sack of Nineveh December 30, 1996 by John Malcolm Russell For information on the more recent looting in Iraq, see " Taking Stock in Baghdad ," April-July 2003. Note: Thumbnails are provided for only a few photographs, as most of the reliefs are barely legible when reduced to thumbnail size. Captioned images may be accessed through buttons in the text, a clickable plan of the throne room suite , or a comprehensive list of illustrations The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold,
And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold.

(Byron, "The Destruction of Sennacherib," 1815) So wrote Byron of the siege of Jerusalem, undertaken by the Assyrian king Sennacherib in 701 B.C. from Nineveh [IMAGE, 37K] , capital of the greatest empire the world had ever known. For two and one-half millennia, the only known account of this momentous event was in II Kings 18-19, which reports that Sennacherib's invincible army was laid low by the angel of the Lord, after which Sennacherib returned to Nineveh where he was murdered by his sons. Nineveh itself fell to the Medes and Babylonians in 612 B.C., its splendor buried under the shifting dust of northern Mesopotamia. General view of Kuyunjik, the palace mound of Nineveh. (Courtesy John M. Russell)

96. Lothene Experimental Archeology Group, Living History, Scotland, Medieval Re-ena
Living history group which researches and recreates aspects of the life of ordinary people in Lothian (Lothene) from Roman times to the 18th Century.
http://www.lothene.demon.co.uk
Saunders Family Album
Site Map Bibliography Frequently Asked Questions ... Press Cuttings
Lothene is an Edinburgh based group involved in researching and recreating aspects of life in Scotland in the 11th Century.
The 11th Century was the period in which the present day boundaries of Scotland were established. Lothene (Lothian), which had previously been a part of Northumbria, was incorporated into the Kingdom of Scotland by King Duncan. This was also the time of Macbeth, Malcolm Canmore, and St Margaret, when Scotland changed from being a primarily Celtic society to one with wider European links.
The population of Scotland was a mixture of Celts with Saxons in the South and Vikings in the North and West.
The lives of ordinary people at this time were mainly based around agriculture and life on farms or in villages although traders brought luxury goods from as far afield as Byzantium, India and Africa. Weapons and Combat
Visits to Schools Schools Information Pack Email us
(please note that if you put relevant titles on email messages they're less likely to get mistaken for spam and deleted unread)
Medieval Crafts
More Scottish History
Iron Age Celts Early Saxon Scottish Wars of
Independence
15th Century ...
Revolution
Lothene Experimental Archaeology are available for displays, talks and educational visits

97. Issues In Ethnicity, Folk Religion And Symbolism
Christopher Fennell, a University of Virginia anthropologist, describes a small Xmarked clay skull, an article of malevolent conjuration buried beneath a Virginia farm house between 1780 and 1860, raising significant issues in ethnic studies, folk magic, anthropology, and historical archaeology.
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/users/fennell/highland/harper/symbol.html
The Demory Site
Loudoun County, Virginia
Issues in Ethnicity, Folk Religion and Symbolism
The following analysis is an edited excerpt from my article, entitled Conjuring Boundaries: Inferring Past Identities from Religious Artifacts , in the International Journal of Historical Archaeology
by Christopher C. Fennell , Ph.D.
Excavations at a late eighteenth-century house site in Loudoun County, Virginia, uncovered an artifact which was likely an object of malevolent conjuration. Such artifacts of "magic to harm" have rarely been found (Wilkie, 1997, p. 88). Due to their covert and secretive character, one would expect the least amount of sharing and borrowing of such traditions across ethnic boundaries. Also due to their secretive nature, such beliefs and practices are typically under-reported in the historical documentary record, and archaeological investigations provide a valuable avenue of detecting and interpreting their use and significance (Wilkie, 1997, p. 93). An initial question is whether this artifact uncovered at the Loudoun house site can be interpreted as the material expression of folk religious beliefs, or something else. Next, if an artifact of folk religion, can it be attributed to one or more ethnic groups, be they African American or European American? Similarly, would it have been meaningful only to members of one of those groups, or would it have been meaningful to members of multiple groups? If it would have been meaningful to multiple groups, what significance does that factor hold?

98. 404 - File Not Found

http://www.serve.com/archaeology/
404 - File not found.
The file requested was not found on our servers. Please check the URL for accuracy, or go back to the previous page. This message is brought to you by Datarealm Internet Services . If you are interested in reliable affordable hosting, we'd be happy to supply you with the support, service, and tools, that you deserve: Shared Hosting Dedicated Servers Dzwonki
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99. Florida Division Of Historical Resources
archaeology, grants, museum of Florida History, underwater preserves, history, and folklife.
http://dhr.dos.state.fl.us/
Florida Facts Kids! Museum Archaeology ... SITE MAP
Office of Cultural and Historical Programs
The new Office of Cultural and Historical Programs is within the Department of State, and is the state agency responsible for promoting the historical, archaeological, museum, arts, and folk culture resources in Florida. The Director of the Division of Historical Resources serves as Florida's State Historic Preservation Officer (SHPO), providing a liaison with the national historic preservation program conducted by the National Park Service. The Division of Cultural Affairs serves as the designated state arts agency. September 01, 2005: Meeting Cancellations due to Hurricane Katrina
New
More...
Offices
Division of
Historical Resources
Bureau of Archaeological Research helps to identify, preserve and interpret the tangible remains of Florida's cultures.
Museum of Florida History
brings the history of the state alive through exhibits, educational programs and research and collections.
Division of
Cultural Affairs
Division of Cultural Affairs guides and facilitates cultural development and services for Florida’s citizens and visitors through public/private partnerships.

100. Michael Cremo And Forbidden Archeology Web Page
Companion site for the author of Forbidden archaeology .
http://www.mcremo.com/
Michael Cremo and Forbidden Archeology Etc.
From its initial release in 1993 to the present, Forbidden Archeology has shocked and delighted readers around the globe with a veritable encyclopedia of anomalous scientific evidence challenging the standard views on human evolution. NEW!
Join us in this fascinating intellectual excavation of a vast store of hidden knowledge and meet author Michael Cremo, who has planted a time bomb in the archives of conventional history. BBT Science Books
Explore the Museum of Forbidden Archeology NBC's Mysterious Origins of Man Michael Cremo's Travel Diary Introducing Michael Cremo ... About Forbidden Archeology Go to Human Devolution website: http://www.humandevolution.com
Go to Forbidden Archeology website: http://www.forbiddenarcheology.com

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