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ISSN 1357-4442
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The new British Archaeology is available in WHSmith and other leading newsagents. To keep up to date with the latest developments in archaeology in the UK you can subscribe online in the CBA Online Shop.
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A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
Archaeology in the American University August 26, 1998
by James Wiseman
During the past 50 years archaeology has been in a state of dynamic evolution as conceptual innovations and expanded concerns have opened up new directions for research, and a host of technologies developed in the natural and physical sciences have had a ...
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A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
A Visionary Act
The Antiquities Act of 1906 defined the study of archaeology as a scientific endeavor and resulted in the protection of 167 million acres of cultural and natural environments.
The Bosnia-Atlantis Connection
Frenzied reporting of supposed pyramids in the Balkans ignores the truth and embraces the fantastic.
Ba ...
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Exploring the Past: An archeological journey
Norman Chance
The history of human beings on this planet is a short one by geologic standards. Yet it covers many millions of years. In trying to understand this development, we can call upon five to ten thousand years of quite satisfactory records which then trail off into the silence of the hunter's and gatherer's Stone Age world. The rest of this time has left no legend on human tongues and an extremely sparse record in the soil. Of the moment ...
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PROTECTIVE STRUCTURES FOR THE CONSERVATION AND PRESENTATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES
A paper presented at the workshop of the 'Contribution of Science and Technology in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage in the Mediterranean Basin', Tunis, June 1997
Zaki Aslan
z.aslan@ucl.ac.uk
Conservation Architect, Jordan/Canada
Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY, United Kingdom
Abstract
A critical review of the effectiveness of shelters or ...
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Africa | Antarctica | Arctic | Asia | Australia/Oceania | Caribbean | Central America | Europe | Islands of the World
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BOLIVIA A Brief Description Fast Facts Flag Landforms Lat/Long Links Maps Time Traveler Info Weather
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A Brief Description
The ancient history of Bolivia is first and foremost woven into the great Andean empires of the Aymara civilization. This innovative and powerful ...
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Africa | Antarctica | Arctic | Asia | Australia/Oceania | Caribbean | Central America | Europe | Islands of the World
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BOLIVIA A Brief Description Fast Facts Flag Landforms Lat/Long Links Maps Time Traveler Info Weather
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A Brief Description
The ancient history of Bolivia is first and foremost woven into the great Andean empires of the Aymara civilization. This innovative and powerful ...
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Africa | Antarctica | Arctic | Asia | Australia/Oceania | Caribbean | Central America | Europe | Islands of the World
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BRAZIL A Brief Description Fast Facts Flag Landforms Lat/Long Links Maps Time Traveler Info Weather
PRINT THIS MAP A Brief Description
Native American peoples (by the millions) occupied this region of South America for eons.
Then in 1500, the Portuguese navigator Pedro Alvares C ...
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BRUCE BRADLEY, PhD
Professional Archaeologist-Educator
Flintknapper-Excursion Leader
Research Associate Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh
Research Associate National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian
Senior Lecturer, Exeter University, United Kingdom
Adjunct Professor, Augustana College, Sioux Falls
Knapping video now available as an indexed dvd- see below
Thank you for coming to this site. I apologise that I have been extremely busy and have neglected to update this ...
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History, Archaeology
& Art HistoryCTICH
The Computers in Teaching Initiative Centre for History Archaeology & Art History
CTICH Services
How we can help you | CTICH Newsletter (Craft)
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Getting Started with Computers in Teaching | Relevant Reports | Specialist Sources | Computer-based Tools
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ARPA: Cultural Site Etiquette
Today, the single largest problem cultural resource managers face is unintentional damage caused by visitors. Sadly, impacts occur even where visitors consistently practice minimum-impact techniques. Therefore, when visiting archeological and historic ...
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Center for Archaeoastronomy Main Page
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ASOR-affiliated centers:
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Cooking Clan of the Cave Bear Style!
Boiling water in a skin pot over a fire (or not...)
Ayla was slicing pieces of yam to put into a skin pot that was boiling over a cooking fire.
Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel (page 140)
While looking for a project to explore for an archaeology course at Simon Fraser University (Arch 372, taught by Michael Wilson) I recalled that I had read somewhere that cooking could be done in a hide container over a fire. When I called my sister in H ...
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Cult and Fringe Archaeology
Introduction History Abandoned ideas Creationism Religious Quests The ‘New Age’ Ley Lines Lost Tribes Lost Continents Alternative Histories Lost Civilisation Sitchin & others Däniken Out-of-place Artefacts Assorted oddities Why, why, why? Pseudoscience Start page Links Reading list Archaeology index Home Email me What is it?
It’s easiest to start by saying what ‘mainstream’ archaeology is. It is the sum total of all knowledge about the material culture of humanity, ...
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Copy Email This Show Close Window
1 of 22
Archaeological Methods
3) Lab and Restoration
Shards of pottery slated for study and/or restoration are stored in the excavation's lab.
An artifact calaloging system at the lab, allows the details of each relic to be recorded and used for research.
Jump to Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Media Show by Mark Eastmond
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And now another all new episode of...
Welcome to the HOME PAGE of RON SPOHN
This is the site of the Casual Archeologist. If you have an interest in Archeology, like I do, and you have watched the TV shows and want to know what these sites really look like, this is the site for you. I have traveled around and seen many famous sites. Each site title will lead to a page with pictures and descriptions of the site. Since all of the pictures were taken by me, feel free to use and dist ...
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Paleo-ethno-botany
'ancient' - 'people' - 'plants'
Paleoethnobotany is a branch of archaeology which studies how people in the past used plants. Plant remains found in archaeological sites can tell us a great deal about the people who once lived there. Paleoethnobotanists study the remains of ancient plants (mainly seeds) preserved in archaeological contexts which can be retrieved by flotation.
Harvesting Wheat
using a hand sickle near El Tod,
eastern Nile Delta, Egypt, June 1 ...
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Table of Contents
Questioning Gender: An Introduction...............1
Cheryl Claassen, Appalachian State University
Women's Participation in American Prehistoric and Historic Archaeology: A Comparative Look at the Journals American Antiquity and Historical Archaeology:.............. 11
Katharine L. Victor and Mary C. Beaudry, Boston University
The Muted Class: Unshackling Tradition...............23
Alice Kehoe, Marquette University
Observing Prehistoric Women...............33
Brian ...
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FORENSIC ARCHAEOLOGY
Please mail me and let me know how you are and what you work is it really dose help to see how is interested in the field of forensic Archaeology.
James Batchelor
If you have a paper you wrote on Forensic Archaeology/Anthropology and you would conceder Letting me put it up on this web site please let me know
PLEASE CLICK ON THE PIC
last updated 1st November 1996
IF YOU LAW ENFORMENT AGENCY AND REQUIRE ASSISTANCE IN FORENSIC ARCHAEOLOGY CONTACT YOUR COUNTRY'S APPROPRIATE AUTHORITIES FOR ADVICE
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ISSN 1463-5194
Archaeology Data Service
Geophysical Data in Archaeology:
A Guide to Good Practice
by Armin Schmidt
with contributions from Tony Austin, Andrew David, Kate Fernie, William Kilbride, Paul Linford, Julian Richards and Damian Robinson
...
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Go to: Guardian Unlimited homeUK newsWorld newsComment is free blogNewsblog----------------------Archive searchArtsBooksBusinessEducationGuardian.co.ukFilmFootballJobsLife and healthMediaGuardian.co.ukMoneyThe ObserverPoliticsScienceShoppingSocietyGuardian.co.ukSportTalkTechnologyTravelBeen there----------------------AudioEmail servicesSpecial reportsThe GuardianThe northernerThe wrap----------------------Advertising guideCrosswordEvents / offersFeedbackGameszoneGarden centreInformationGNL ...
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Guided Tour
Start with page one if you have never visited our site before, otherwise select any topic that interests you.
Exploring this site!
What Is Archaeology?
A Brief History of Archeological Method
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To continue you guided tour please select one of the following areas to explore
The Past
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Or you can return to our home page
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International Vegetarian Union
History of Vegetarianism
The Diet of Early Humans
Vegetarianism and Archaeology
Derek Wall examines the "mighty hunter" myth of human ancestry
from The Vegetarian, September/October 1988, published by The Vegetarian Society UK:
Derek Wall, B.Sc., studied archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology which is part of London University.
Archaeology and vegetarianism are, at first sight, a rather unlikely combination; most people if asked to consider ...
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The Illicit Antiquities Research Centre
About the IARCContacts
Statement of IntentNews and Events
International Conventions
(Multilingual)Culture Without Context
Newsletter of the IARC
ResourcesSearch this WWW Site
Culture Without Context, Issues 15 and 16
IARC awarded EAA Archaeological Heritage Prize 2004
Jenny Doole (jd244@cus.cam.ac.uk)
Illicit Antiquities Research Centre
McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Downing Street,
Cambridge, CB2 3ER.
First posted October, 1998; last updated December 2005
University of Cambridge.
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Sample Report
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the premier e-journal for archaeology
ISSN 1363-5387 URL: http://intarch.ac.uk
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Search Internet Archaeology is the first fully refereed e-journal for archaeology and publishes articles of a high academic standing which utilise the potential of electronic publication. Internet Archaeology is published by the Council for British Archaeol ...
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INTERPRETING THE FUNCTION OF
STONE TOOLS
by
Roger Grace
This is a hypertext version of the book:-
Grace, R. 1989
Interpreting the Function of Stone Tools: The quantification and computerisation of microwear analysis. B.A.R. international series 474.
contents
CHAPTER 1: HISTORY OF FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS
CHAPTER 2: THE QUANTIFICATION OF MICROWEAR POLISHES
CHAPTER 3: INVESTIGATING HAFTING TRACES WITH IMAGE PROCESSING
CHAPTER 4: A MULTI-DIMENTIONAL APPROACH TO FUNC ...
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Janiculum Mills Excavations
Roman water-mills on the Janiculum Hill, Rome
Background
At the invitation of the American Academy in Rome, and with the kind permission of the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Roma, a 5-week excavation season was undertaken in June and July 1998 to investigate the Aqua Traiana and a large Roman water-mill complex in the Academy's parking lot, on the Janiculum Hill in Rome. The 1998 season was funded by the American Academy, the Packard Foundation and the Crav ...
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Learning Sites is the leader in reliable archaeological visualizations for interactive education and research and a pioneer in the growing field called Virtual Heritage (using virtual reality for the study and dissemination of information about the distant past).
Our visualizations and online materials are used in classrooms around the world for a more engaging and exciting look at history; the virtual worlds and online links become a participatory experience for students.
For a more detailed and interactive peek into the past, visit our partner site, the Institute for the Visualization of History (www.vizin.org).
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Point Types Indexed Alphabetically | Point Types Indexed By Shape | Illustrated Standard Point Terminology
LITHICS-Net Point Type Information
Welcome to Art Gumbus' LITHICS-Net. This page is your gateway to two types of point typology indexes.
The Alphabetical Index lists all of the point types that I have cataloged to date. This index is in point name sequence and is the original LITHICS-Net index. The assumption in using this index is that you know the type and want to view information a ...
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PERU A Brief Description Fast Facts Flag Landforms Lat/Long Links Maps Time Traveler Info Weather
PRINT THIS MAP A Brief Description
At one time Peru was the homeland of several prominent Andean civilizations, with the Incas certainly the most notable.
The incredible Incas built ...
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This page tries to give an introduction into photogrammetrical applications to archaeology. Our daily aerial archaeological work is closely connected with photogrammetry. Therefore, we made contact with CIPA.
CIPA stands for Comite International de la Photogrammétrie Architecturale. It is one of the international committees of ICOMOS (International Council Of Monuments and Sites) and it was established in collaboration with ISPRS (International Society of P ...
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Ethnicity, Race and the Archaeology of the Atlantic Slave Trade
Dan Hicks
Abstract
The issue of ethnicity has been little considered by British post-medieval archaeology. Archaeology has unique access to evidence of the role of material culture in the expression and negotiation of historical identities. This paper aims to provide a theoretical framework for the study of ethnicity in the post-medieval period.
Many archaeological discussions of ethnicity take a ‘situati ...
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1.Salvage archaeology
2.Amazing Indian mounds
3.Effigy mound culture
4.Three Gorgeous Gorges
The Aswan High Dam, 2.5 miles across and 364 feet high, was completed in 1971 to supply cheap hydroelectric power to Egypt and Sudan. Lake Nasser, the impoundment on the Nile River, covers some 2,000 square miles.
Courtesy NASA
Han dynasty bronze tomb stove, made between 206 B.C and 220 A.D.
Courtesy Richard Sindler Not Tut
POSTED 5 JULY 2001 If you're old enough to remember Egypt ...
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SARC
STONE AGE REFERENCE COLLECTION
SARC has been developed for the teaching department of the Institute of Archaeology(I.A.K.K.) at the University of Oslo, Norway.
Institutt for Arkeologi, Kunsthistorie og Konservering
Available in English og Norsk
SARC is a reference program containing information about the TYPOLOGY, TECHNOLOGY, RAW MATERIALS and STUDY METHODS of the Stone Age.
click on icons to access sections
or the master INDEX
References in the text are ...
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Show menu RSS feeds | Free newsletterSource: Texas A&M University
Posted: January 15, 2001Yahoo:
del.icio.us: Save This Page
Computed Tomography Scans Useful Tools In Both Medical And Archaeological Applications
College Station -- They say you can't teach an old dog new tricks, but a seasoned archaeologist learned one: computed tomography (CT) scans can be useful tools in both medical and archaeological applications.
The College of Veterinary Medicine and the Institute of Nau ...
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STONE AGE HAND-AXES
There were no handaxes at the beginning of the Pleistocene, and none at the end, but for one million years in between this was the tool of choice for stone age man. Although everpresent in stone age culture, the exact purpose and use of this tool remains a mystery.
The Pleistocene lasted from two million years ago to the present., which is called the Holocene. At the beginning of the Pleistocene primitive man was already using fire and making stone, bone, and wooden ...
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Added July January 4, 2001. Updated January 17, 2001, 11:36 hours.
Version 1.22
The Iceman’s Food Fight
By
Maximilian O. Baldia ©
(All rights reserved)
The Iceman has been a continued source of controversy ever since he was found on Thursday, September 19, 1991. He was discovered high at the Hauslabjoch in a glacier of the Ötztal Alps (the Tyrolean Alps) on the Austrian/Italian border. The current debate is about the diet of the Neolithic/Copper Age man.
When the Ice ...
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This paper originally appeared in Journal of Field Archaeology 20 (1993) 319--333, and is reproduced here by permission of the Trustees of Boston University. Copyright 1993 the Trustees of Boston University.
The Nature of Clarity in Archaeological Line Drawings
David Ford
Lincoln, Massachusetts
No one questions the importance of effective communication in reporting archaeological findings. Writing is one means of communication, but presenting graphic material (photographs and li ...
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June 8, 2006 08:06
User forums around the web have been abuzz with complaints about the non-Linux version of one of Linksys' most popular products. Tim Higgins tested it and the WRT54GL Linux-based version and found at least one reason why the V5 has so many unhappy buyers.
Two Drives Are Better Than One: Thecus YES Box N2100
June 6, 2006 09:06
Draft 802. ...
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The El Brujo Project
An IBM/PUCP/Wiese collaboration in virtual archaeology
El Brujo
(The Wizard)
(Haga click aqui para Español)
The goal of the project is the virtual reconstruction (using computers) of the painted figures on the ceiling of a ceremonial precinct at the Huaca Cao Viejo located within the archeological site of El Brujo (The Wizard). This ceiling was destroyed some time around A.D. 700.
The El Brujo project began with an agreement between the Pontificia ...
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Welcome To DirtBrothers.org
(Optimized for viewing at 1024 x 768) CLEAR YOUR CACHE-- or new additions will not show up!
Enter The Dirt Brothers: Can You Dig It?
Experience Controlled Excavations Up-Close!
Largest Archaelology Web Site in the World.
NEW!Enter JourneySpirits
Jeff Coopers's new exploration of the ancient past.
It'll make you think!
Enter Peotone: Caught In The Middle
Grassroots Archaeology Activism
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[enter The Dig]
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A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
Wisconsin's Cave of Wonders January 30, 2001
by Amélie A. Walker
Rock art found in a Wisconsin cave dates to A.D. 700. An abstract charcoal drawing is shown here. (Courtesy Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center) [LARGER IMAGE]
Over one hundred 1,300-year-old charcoal drawings and engravings have been found in a cave in sou ...
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