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         European (eastern) Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Communities in Transformation (Anthropological Journal on European Cultures)
  2. Pontus and the Outside World: Studies in Black Sea History, Historiography, and Archaeology (Colloquia Pontica)
  3. Cyprus Before History: From the Earliest Settlers to the End of the Bronze Age (Duckworth Archaeology) by Louise Steel, 2004-09
  4. Egypt and Egyptianizing Scarabs: A Typology of Steatite, Faience and Paste Scarabs from Punic and other Mediterranean Sites (Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, Monograph , No 44) by Andree Feghali Gorton, 1996-10
  5. Archaeological Perspectives On The Transmission And Transformation Of Culture In The Eastern Mediterranean (Levant Supplement Series)
  6. Beycesultan (Occasional Publication of the British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara) by James Mellaart, Ann Murray, 1995-09
  7. The Bronze Age & Early Iron Age Peoples of Eastern Central Asia [Chung Ya Tung Pu Ching Tung Ho Tsao Chi Tieh Chi Shih Tai TI Chu Min] (Journal of Indo-European Studies Monograph #26, 2 vols.)
  8. The Archaeology of Death in the Ancient Near East (Oxbow Monographs in Archaeology, Number 51) (Oxbow Monographs in Archaeology, Number 51)
  9. Prehistoric Bulgaria (Monographs in World Archaeology, No 22) by Douglass W. Bailey, Ivan Panayotov, 1995-04
  10. The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region, c. 500-700 (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series) by Florin Curta, 2007-04-30
  11. The Face of East European Jewry (Weimar and Now: German Cultural Criticism, 35) by Arnold Zweig, 2004-05-10
  12. Toward a European Nation?: Political Trends in Europe : East and West, Center and Periphery
  13. Hunters between East and West: The Paleolithic of Moravia (Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology) by Jiri Svoboda, Vojen Lozek, et all 1996-09-30
  14. The New Parliaments of Central and Eastern Europe (Library of Legislative Studies) by David M. Olson, 1996-05-01

21. Archaeology Publications - 167 Of The Best Sites Selected By Humans
of archaeology european archaeology -Archaeologia Bulgarica Middle_East Iran -IranicaAntiqua Middle_East -Akkadica -Near (eastern) archaeology Forum -Near
http://www.cbel.com/archaeology_publications/?order=alpha

22. Middle-Eastern Archaeology - Encyclopedia Article About Middle-Eastern Archaeolo
is about the Crusades, the series of european military campaigns with the history,language and archaeology of ancient a large island in the (eastern) Levant was
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Middle-Eastern archaeology
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Middle-Eastern archaeology
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Middle-Eastern archaeology encompasses the area known as the Fertile Crescent The Fertile Crescent is a region in the Middle East incorporating present-day Israel, West Bank, and Lebanon and parts of Jordan, Syria, Iraq and south-eastern Turkey. The term "Fertile Crescent" was coined by University of Chicago archeologist James Henry Breasted. Watered by the Jordan, Euphrates and Tigris rivers and covering some 400-500,000 sq. km. with a population of 40-50 million, the region extends from the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea around the north of the Syrian Desert and through the Jazirah and Mesopotamia to the Persian Gulf.
Click the link for more information. ; the region between the Nile Valley (modern day Egypt This article is about the country Egypt. For other uses of the word, see Egypt (disambiguation).
Jumhuriyat Misr al-Arabiyah
Arab Republic of Egypt

(In Detail) Official language Arabic
Capital Cairo
Click the link for more information.

23. European Archaeology - Encyclopedia Article About European Archaeology. Free Acc
Click the link for more information. Siracusa Syracuse (Siracusa in Italian) isa city on the (eastern) coast of Sicily, Italy. See also european archaeology.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/European archaeology
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
European archaeology
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition European Europe is a continent whose boundaries are the Atlantic Ocean in the west, the Arctic Ocean to the north, the Ural Mountains and Ural River in the east, the Caspian Sea, Caucasus mountains and Black Sea in the southeast and the Mediterranean Sea as the southern boundary. With Asia, Europe forms the supercontinent Eurasia: Europe is the western fifth of the Eurasian landmass. In terms of area, Europe is the world's second smallest continent, with an area of 10,400,000 square kilometres (4,000,000 square miles), making it slightly larger than Oceania.
Click the link for more information. Archaeology Archaeology (or archeology ) is the scientific study of past human cultures through the recovery, documentation and analysis of material remains, including architecture, artifacts, biofacts, human remains, and landscapes. Other subfields of anthropology supplement the findings of archaeology, as do other disciplines. The study of present cultures, using these and other means, is

24. Bryn Mawr - Classical And Near Eastern Archaeology - Professor Peter Magee
Title Assistant Professor, Classical and Near (eastern) archaeology. Research Interestsarchaeology of imperialism in and the history of european exploration of
http://www.brynmawr.edu/archaeology/pmagee_bio.htm
Department of Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Archaeology Home Course Listing Graduate Program Faculty/Staff ... Useful Links Peter Magee
PhD:
The University of Sydney, 1996
Title: Assistant Professor, Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Office: Thomas Hall 228
Phone:
Email:
pmagee@brynmawr.edu Curriculum Vitae
Research Interests:

Archaeology of imperialism in south and west Asia, human habitation of arid environments and the history of European exploration of the Middle East, particularly Arabia.
Click here for more information, including a summary of the excavations at Muweilah

Courses:
Undergraduate

An Introduction to the Archaeology of the ancient Near East Araby the Blest: The Archaeology of Arabia from 3000 to 300 BC In the Land of the Buddha The Archaeology of south Asian society in the first millennium BC Women in the Ancient Near East Ceramic Analysis Archaeological Fieldwork Methods Senior Seminar: Materials and Trade in the Late Bronze Age and early Iron Age in the Near East.

25. Indo
Near (eastern) Studies Department, the Indoeuropean Language and Culture Working Group,and the Graduate Group in Ancient History and Mediterranean archaeology).
http://www.indo-european.org/page4.html
Indo-European Events at UC Berkeley
(Updated 24 March 2004)
Spring 2004 Events Monday, March 15. Brian Joseph, Professor of Linguistics and Kenneth E. Naylor Professor of South Slavic Linguistics, Ohio State University, “How verb endings get reshuffled evidence from South Slavic, Greek, and Albanian". 4 p.m., Dwinelle 182. Co-sponsored by the Dept. of Linguistics and the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, with support from the Diebold Of related interest: A workshop on "Language and Dialect in Archaic Italy", Friday - Saturday, March 12 - 13, 2004, Faculty Club, UC Berkeley. Fall 2003 Events Tuesday, September 16. Richard Salomon, Prof. of Asian Languages and Literatures, U of Washington, “Doing Linguistics Through Philology: Reconstructing the Gandhari (Northwest Prakrit) Language,” 5 p.m. in Dwinelle 370 Sunday, October 5 . Claudia Chang, Prof. of Anthropology, Sweet Briar College, “Digging the Eurasian Steppe: Ten Years of Excavations and Surveys in the Talgar Region of Southeastern Kazakhstan,” 3 p.m. in Dwinelle 370 (Co-sponsored with the Archaeological Institute of America and the Archaeological Research Facility) Of related interest: (at UCLA) November 7-8.

26. Ancient History And Archaeology
and relevance to the larger (eastern) Meditteranean region The topics covered are archaeology,ancient history Editorial responsibility european Centre for Upper
http://www.brepols.net/publishers/archaeology.htm
The following series fall under the rubric Series on Ancient History and Archaeology Please click on a series to get a detailed description or use the scrollbars to scan all available series. Abiel Archéologie médiévale Berliner Turfantexte Collectanea Hellenistica Etudes de Philologie, d'Archéologie et d'Histoire Anciennes Indicopleustoi, Archaeologies of the Indian Ocean ... Abiel (ABIEL) Editorial responsibility: D.T. Potts, M.C.A. Macdonald Although the Western exploration of the Arabian peninsula is a phenomenon dating back several centuries, the systematic archaeological investigation of the region is relatively recent. Since the 1960s, however, more and more work of an archaeological and epigraphic nature has been concentrated on the countries of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, the U.A.E, and Yemen, and Arabian archaeology has emerged as an important sub-discipline of Near Eastern archaeology.This series is devoted to the publication of primary research in the countries of the Arabian peninsula, and aims to publish studies which extend in time from prehistory to the Islamic era. Archéologie médiévale (ARCHMED) Editorial responsibility: Berliner Turfantexte (BTT) Editorial responsibility: Akademievorhaben Turfanforschung The task of the Turfan research group lies in continuing the edition of the Turkish and Iranian parts of the Berlin Turfan Collection (approx. 12000 fragments). Edition of these texts entails establishing a critical text (sometimes compiled), together with the provision of translation and commentary.

27. ANT 526 Archaeology Of Eastern North America
The archaeology of any culture area in the Americas has The (eastern) portion of NorthAmerica amplifies the problem, because european settlers were
http://www.as.ua.edu/ant/Faculty/brown/ant526.htm
Department of Anthropology College of Arts and Sciences The University of Alabama A rchaeology of Eastern North America
ANT 526 Fall 2001 Dr. Ian W. Brown, Professor of Anthropology Tuesday, 4–6:30, Mary Harmon Bryant Building (MHBB), Rm 328 Office Mary Harmon Bryant Building (MHBB), Rm 418 Office hours Wednesday and Thursday, 8:30–noon, or by appointment Phone E-Mail ibrown@ua.edu The archaeology of any culture area in the Americas has become an immense topic, capable of doing in even the most serious of scholars. The eastern portion of North America amplifies the problem, because European settlers were debating various aspects of Indian origins the moment they stepped off their boats. Consequently, there is a lot of literature on the subject and numerous avenues in which we could explore the area. For this semester I have decided to focus on a series of edited volumes that contain articles written by some of the principal archaeologists currently working in Eastern North America. The contributions in these books were meant to be read in their entirety and, often, in the sequence in which they are arranged. Consequently, instead of dividing up the various articles and assigning different ones to individual students, I want you to read the books according to the editors' intent, from cover to cover.

28. The Comparative Archaeology WEB Chronology Of America ©
In european and Near (eastern) archaeology, such activities are viewed as part ofthe Neolithic, which is usually also characterized by the use of pottery.
http://www.comp-archaeology.org/USAChronology.htm
Added August 27, 2000 . Updated May 8, 2004 Since it appears that there is relatively little readily available information in many parts of the world on American Archaeology, this Internet page aims to inform archaeologists on the subject. The aim is to facilitate Comparative Archaeology as defined on the home page of the Comparative Archaeology WEB©. This page will be refined and improved as deemed necessary and useful.
The Comparative Archaeology WEB: Chronology of America
By Maximilian O. Baldia
All rights reserved May 30, 1999 to May 8, 2004
Introduction
America is named after the Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci (1451-1512 AD). The German geographer Martin Waldseemüller in his popular account of his travels first used the name in 1507. It originally referred only South America and the West Indies America United States of America USA Americas South America are considered separate continents. In addition, North American archaeologists customarily divide lands of the western hemisphere into three broad regions: North America , Central or Mesoamerica , and South America North and South America North America is the third largest continent with 24 235 280 square kilometers (km ). By comparison

29. The Corded Ware / Single Grave Culture. © The Comparative Archaeology WEB
as a resource for students and teachers of european archaeology. much of North, Centraland (eastern) Europe (Map of Grave culture, the Central european, and the
http://www.comp-archaeology.org/CordedWare.htm
Added November 18, 2001. Updated October 6, 2003 hours. This page will be updated occasionally to add and revise information. Version 1.02 The Corded Ware / Single Grave Culture By Maximilian O. Baldia (Copy Right © 2001- October 6, 2003
List of Tables
Table Central and North German chronological table Table 2. Danish and North German Single Grave culture Periods
List of Figures Figure Map of Corded Ware distribution Figure Corded Ware artifacts from Central Europe Figure 3. Single Grave artifacts from the Lüneburg region, Germany Figure 4. Single Grave close-up of pottery and battleaxes
Introduction The purpose of this text is to provide a general overview of the culture and is intended as a resource for students and teachers of European Archaeology.
Location
The wide-spread Corded Ware culture complex (German: Schnurkeramik ) derives its name from the frequent use of decorative cord impressions on the pots. The pottery roughly covers the former territory of the Funnel Beaker and related cultures. However, in the east it goes far beyond its confines. Thus, it is found throughout much of North, Central and Eastern Europe ( Map of Corded Ware distribution ). On the map I divide the complex into the

30. The Archaeology Of The Goddess
Finally, archaeologists state that although the evidence does suggest that have focusedon fertility, the use of Indoeuropean and Near (eastern) myths and
http://www.uiowa.edu/~anthro/webcourse/lost/goddess.html
Lost Tribes, Sunken Continents and Ancient Astronauts:
Cult Archaeology and Creationism
Briefing on
THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE GODDESS
Prepared by Arnaud Lambert You may also read a full version of this project, MYTHS, MOTHERS, AND MATRIARCHIES: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE GODDESS. Goddess archaeology hypothesizes that the Paleolithic and Neolithic cultures of Europe (25,000 to 2500 BC) were matriarchal and worshipped fertility in the form of a female deity known today as the Goddess. Proponents of Goddess archaeology (Gimbutas 1991, 1996; Starhawk 1989; Stone 1976) claim that the Paleolithic and Neolithic were a time of peace and harmony between the genders as well as between humans and nature. They also argue that this era of matriarchy ended with invasions by war-like, patriarchal, speakers of Indo-European languages.
A SUMMARY OF THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL ARGUMENTS:
Pro: 1. Paleolithic and Neolithic female figures with exaggerated breasts, vulvas, buttocks and/or bellies. Indicates the importance of fertility in prehistoric Europe (Gimbutas 1991, 1996). 2. Female figurines seated on altars or thrones, handling animals, and with the heads of animals. Ceramic pieces with symbols of eggs, animals, and women. Shows that women were important in religion and governed over the fertility of animals (Gimbutas 1991, 1996).

31. UI Anthro - European Archaeology
Current and Recent Graduate Students Conducting Research in european ArchaeologyErik Filean of the Roman Frontier Economy in the (eastern) Netherlands” Ph.D
http://www.uiowa.edu/~anthro/euroarch.htm
European Archaeology
The Department of Anthropology at the University of Iowa is one of the few departments in North America with a strength in European archaeology. The faculty in this group conduct on-going fieldwork in Europe on a broad range of time periods - from the Paleolithic to Roman civilization - and diverse topics. Jim Enloe is currently working on changes in adaptation of late Upper Paleolithic hunters in northern France. Katina Lillios is examining the role of memory and material mnemonics in the development of social inequalities during the Copper Age of Portugal and Spain (3500-2500 BC). Glenn Storey is working on issues of the ancient economy in Roman Holland and Greco-Roman Sicily, using ground penetrating radar to aid in site investigation.
Faculty with Current or Recent Research Projects in European Archaeology
James Enloe
Katina Lillios

Glenn Storey

Current and Recent Graduate Students Conducting Research in European Archaeology
Go to
The University of Iowa

Home
p ...
Return to main UI Anthropology page
Last Updated: 10-2003

32. Archaeology And Cultural Diversity
two, previously different, scientific traditions in archaeology classical or cooperationsbetween european and non-european (eastern) Mediterranean countries
http://godot.unisa.edu.au/wac/session.php?session=138

33. Diss; Historic Collections, Marischal Museum Collections Page
european, Mediterranean Near (eastern) archaeology. Nonwestern ethnography. FineArt. european, Mediterranean Near (eastern) archaeology. Non-western ethnography.
http://www.abdn.ac.uk/diss/historic/museum/collections/
exhibitions collections services information Non-western ethnography Fine Art Numismatics
collections Non-western ethnography Fine Art Numisatics Collecting policy Non-western ethnography Fine Art Numismatics exhibitions collections services information

34. The Infography About Bronze Age And Iron Age Populations -- Eastern Central Asia
and Iron Age Peoples of (eastern) Central Asia Museum of Anthropology and archaeology,Philadelphia, April 19 Friends and Alumni of Indoeuropean Studies Newsletter
http://www.infography.com/content/413240560522.html
Search The Infography:
Bronze Age and Iron Age Populations Eastern Central Asia
The following sources are recommended by a professor whose research specialty is the ancient history of Eastern Central Asia.
Six Superlative Sources
Baumer, Christoph. Southern Silk Road: In the Footsteps of Sir Aurel Stein and Sven Hedin. Orchid Press, 2000. Mair, Victor H., ed. The Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Peoples of Eastern Central Asia. 2 vols. The Institute for the Study of Man; The University of Pennsylvania Museum Publications, 1998. Vol. 1: Archeology, Migration and Nomadism, Linguistics; vol. 2: Genetics and Physical Anthropology, Metallurgy, Textiles, Geography and Climatology, History, and Mythology and Ethnology. Contains 47 scholarly papers, plus a substantial introduction, appendices, maps, hundreds of illustrations, index. Mair, Victor H. "Mummies of the Tarim Basin." Archaeology, 48.2 (March/April, 1995), 28-35. Mallory, J.P., with Victor H. Mair. The Tarim Mummies: Ancient China and the Mystery of the Earliest Peoples from the West. Thames and Hudson, 2000. Samolin, W. East Turkestan to the Twelfth Century: A Brief Political Survey. Mouton, 1964.

35. (Environmental) Archaeological Resources
Peabody Museum at Harvard University description of collections, among whichsome of interest to european archaeology. Near (eastern) archaeology
http://www.aber.ac.uk/~ieswww/geores/archres.html
(Environmental) Archaeological Resources
Discussion lists:
News groups
Journals:

36. Middle Near Eastern Archaeology Papyrus
Music Books. Web Resources. Amazon. Australian Mathematics Trust. european MathematicalSociety (EMS). Kappa Mu Epsilon Official Site. Barnes and Nobles.
http://mathematicsbooks.org/Middle_Near_Eastern_archaeology_Papyrus.html

Home
Search High Volume Orders Links ... Philosophy of Mathematics Additional Subjects Celebrating the Impressionist Table The Voice of the Child: A Handbook for Professionals Schaum's Outline of Programming with C++ Squash ... Caedmon Short Story Collection Books Catalogue of Books of the Dead in the British Museum: The Papyrus of Hor
Published by British Museum Press (November 2001)
ISBN 0714119490
Catalogue of Books of the Dead in the British Museum: The Papyrus of Nu

Written by Gunther Lapp
Published by British Museum Press (April 1997)
ISBN 0714119024
The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus: An Ancient Egyptian Text

Written by Gay Robins Charles Shute
Published by British Museum Press (January 1998) ISBN 0714109444 See Also Archibald MacLeish Ven Conmigo!: Holt Spanish Level 2 Bob Dylan Bobby Bowden: Win by Win ... Mathematics Nash Our Bookstores Cooking Books Games Books Computer Books Health Books ... Music Books Web Resources Amazon Australian Mathematics Trust European Mathematical Society (EMS) Kappa Mu Epsilon - Official Site ... Exchange links with us

37. ANCH Faculty List
Associate Professor, Anthropology, Ancient Near (eastern) archaeology and history, Professor,Linguistics, Historical Linguistics, Indoeuropean, Indian Grammatical
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

38. Finding Periodical Articles On Archaeology - Widener Library Web Site - Harvard
Introduction and Basic Index. This guide covers largely european,Classical and Near (eastern) archaeology. For indexes of classical
http://hcl.harvard.edu/widener/services/research/subindexes/perarch.html
FINDING PERIODICAL ARTICLES ON ARCHAEOLOGY Introduction and Basic Index This guide covers largely European, Classical and Near Eastern archaeology. For indexes of classical studies see Finding Periodical Articles in Classical Studies . For the rest of the world, see Finding Periodical Articles on Anthropology . The most comprehensive index for archaeology is DYABOLA. Good results may also be obtained with Social Sciences/Arts and Humanities Citation Index in Harvard Libraries. There are many other indexes, some print and some electronic, which are more specialized and/or cover the earlier literature. Basic Index:
DYABOLA Sachkataloge des Deutschen Archaologischen Instituts
LOCATION: Fine Arts: Reading Room Research Work Stations Web access: Go to http://www.dyabola.de on one of the Fine Arts Library Reading Room Research Work Stations. You will be logged in automatically. The less easy to use CD-ROM version is also available on one of the Work Stations. Choose Realkatalog. Covers European and Near Eastern archeology, prehistory-Byzantine. Includes books, book chapters, and periodical articles. Book reviews are included. PROJEKT DYABOLA: General User Manual for the DYA v5.5 Retrieval Programme

39. Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology: Practical Information
is March 1, 2004 for noneuropean Union citizens, July 1, 2004 for european Unioncitizens. (eastern) MEDITERRANEAN archaeology The Secretary
http://www.arts.kuleuven.ac.be/ema/information/information.htm
Courses are taught in English. Non-native English speakers wishing to enroll for the programme are therefore required to have a good command of this language, i.e. a score of 550 (or 213 computer-based) on the "Test of English as a Foreign Language" (TOEFL) or a score of 7 on the "International English Language Testing System" (IELTS) . Candidates may also submit an attest certifying that the language utilized in the preparatory training was wholly English. The academic programme of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology consists of one compulsory unit of environmental sciences and two options of archaeological courses focused on a specific time frame. Candidates are required to successfully complete a minimum of 60 points. Additional to the truncus communis of environmental courses, they must choose one of the archaeological options. Students wishing to alter a course within these modules may apply for this after deliberation with their supervisor. A dissertation thesis on a topic related to the selected option is compulsory. Most courses are weekly two-hour sessions, often organised as reading seminars. Discussion topics will be based on selected articles and chapters from specialised books(a list of prerequisite and recommended literature will be available). The programma also includes occasional guest lectures and visits to museums and exhibitions in Belgium and neighbouring coutries. Students enrolling for the programme are expected to write a dissertation (about 15.000 words or 50 typewritten pages) on a topic related to the selected option. Belgian students who wish to enrol for only part of the programme will receive a certificate indicating the courses that were successfully completed. Exams, mostly under the form of oral tests, will take place at the end of each semester (in January and June). Students who fail one or more examinations, may take them again during a third session (in August and September).

40. Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology: Staff Profiles
He has been involved in archaeological surveys and excavations in last 100,000 Yearsin the european Plains Late Palaeolithic of Northern and (eastern) Africa, in
http://www.arts.kuleuven.ac.be/ema/resumes/profiles1.htm
Joachim BRETSCHNEIDER (born 1961) Is a Visiting Postdoctoral Fellow of the 'Fund for Scientific Research' (F.W.O.) and Lecturer in Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium). Since 1985, he excavated in Cyprus (Kourion) and Syria (Tell Mohammed Diyab, Tell Beydar). J. Bretschneider is head of the German research team ( Subartu III , 1997. Wagon representations in the Early Dynastic Glyptic, in Subartu IV Antike Welt 4 , 1997 (co-au. K. Van Lerberghe). - Top of Page - Return to Staff Index (born 1957) Is a member of the graduate staff of the Groningen Institute of Archaeology, Universiteit Groningen Life on the Fringe , 1998, pp. 75-86, Leiden: Centre of Non-Western studies; Problems in correlating pollen diagrams of the Near East. A preliminary report. In: A.B. Damania et al. (eds): The origins of agriculture and crop domestication. The Harlan symposium

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