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         European Archeology:     more books (47)
  1. Te Wai Pounamu - The Greenstone Island: A History of the Southern Maori During the European Colonization of New Zealand. (book reviews): An article from: Oceania by Toon van Meijl, 1996-09-01
  2. "A permanent and even European reputation": the lost work of the Reverend Walter Gregor.(Biography): An article from: Folklore by Stephen Miller, 2005-08-01
  3. The Monuments of Italy: A Regional Survey of Art, Architecture and Archeology from Classical to Modern Times by Michael Oppenheimer, 2002-05-03
  4. Archaeologia Mvndi
  5. Was the vampire of the eighteenth century a unique type of undead-corpse?(RESEARCH ARTICLE): An article from: Folklore by G. David Keyworth, 2006-12-01
  6. Dark Caves, Bright Visions
  7. Field Archeology by Ordnance Survey, 1973-12
  8. The Role of Religion in the Postwar Settlement Patterns of Dutch Canadians [*].: An article from: The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology by Joanne Van Dijk, 2001-02-01
  9. Handbook To Life In Prehistoric Europe (Handbook to Life) by Jane R. Mcintosh, 2006-05-28
  10. Dictionary of Archeology: Dizionario D'Archeologia by Warwick Bray, 1980-06
  11. Corruption scandals in America and Europe; Enron and EU fraud in comparative perspective.: An article from: Social Analysis by Cris Shore, 2003-09-22
  12. The Greek Stones Speak: The Story of Archaeology in Greek Lands by Paul Lachlan MacKendrick, 1983-04
  13. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Worthy Park, Kingsworthy, Near Winchester, Hampshire (Oxford University School of Archaeology Monograph, 59) by Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, Guy Grainger, 2004-03
  14. Guernsey: An Island Community of the Atlantic Iron Age (Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, Monograph , No 43) by Heather Sebire, Mike Allen, 1996-10

41. Archeology Of Amistad National Recreation Area
An Overview of european History in the Amistad Reservoir Basin by Joseph Big BendNatural History Association Presents archeology Seminars at Amistad NRA.
http://www.nps.gov/amis/arch.htm
Seminole Canyon SHP Rock Art Foundation Shumla Shool Texas Beyond History ... Home
archeology
rock art of the lower pecos Lower Pecos River region rock art is considered by experts to be world class, and comparable in significance to sites in Europe, Australia, and America's Baja California. With 250-plus known sites within a 100-square- mile area, the region has one of the densest concentrations of Archaic rock art in the new world, and among the largest multicolored images in North America. While you are at Amistad National Recreation Area, you can see some of this famous rock art with a visit to Panther Cave, accessible by boat. Parida Cave, on the Rio Grande, is also accessible by boat if water levels are permitting. Visitors who don't have boats can see spectacular rock art on guided tours at nearby Seminole Canyon State Historical Park, or at the White Shaman-Galloway Preserve just west of Seminole Canyon on Hwy. 90. The Rock Art Foundation leads guided tours of the White Shaman and other pictograph sites on weekends. archeology of the lower pecos

42. An Archeological Overview Of The People Of The Upper Missouri - W. Raymond Wood
by european trade goods, making it impossible to compare their native goods withthose of preeuropean times. 1971, Introduction to Middle Missouri archeology.
http://www.nps.gov/jeff/LewisClark2/TheBicentennial/Symposium2001/Papers/Wood_Ra

Schedule
Speakers Papers Home ... Papers > "An Archeological Overview of the People of the Upper Missouri" An Archeological Overview
of the People of the Upper Missouri
W. Raymond Wood
University of Missouri - Columbia
Please do not quote or cite without permission By the time of the Louisiana Purchase a great deal was known in St. Louis about the tribes that lived along the lower Missouri River and its tributaries. Marquette and Jolliet had charted the positions of tribes in that area relative to the river's course in 1673, and later French explorations had filled in many of the details of their customs and intertribal relations. But comparable knowledge of the tribes of the upper Missouri River- that is, above the mouth of the Platte River in Nebraska- was not obtained for more than a century after Marquette and Jolliet; indeed, not until the last decade of the 1700s.
This archaeological overview will focus on the tribes that lived along the banks of the upper Missouri River in sedentary communities of earth-covered lodges. This choice is dictated by the fact that the archaeology of their nomadic neighbors is simply unknown. The reason? These nomadic tipi-dwellers did not remain very long in one location, and they left little behind them in their abandoned camps to tell us of their lives. The ruins and extensive refuse middens left at earth lodge communities, on the other hand, provide a rich record of how these people lived. The Great Plains tribes of history and stereotype consist of the nomadic tribes, but an equally dramatic way of life took place in the Missouri valley.

43. CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAN EDUCATION DIRECTORY - ARCHEOLOGY PROGRAMMES / PROGR
ARTS HUMANITIES, Central Eastern european Education Directory.IN ASSOCIATION WITH BUSINESS SCHOOL. Kazakhstan. archeology. Kazakh
http://www.ceebd.co.uk/ceeed/kazak/arts/arch.htm

European Directory On-Line
Engineering MBA Science Search: EuroEducation ... Student Holidays
Education Directory
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
BUSINESS SCHOOL
Kazakhstan
Archeology Kazakh National State University "Al Farabi" To add detailed information on your school/university contact add-school@ceebd.co.uk
City Business Promotion Centre Ltd

44. African Archeology
Archaeology of Novgorod Archeologia Medievale Archeobase Archéologie Archéologieet gobelets ARCHEOLOGIS ArcheoTech SA Archives of european Archaeology (AREA
http://home.worldonline.cz/~cz307421/eur-arch.asp.htm
Afrika Austrálie a Pacifik Blízký a Støední Východ Britské ostrovy ... E-MAIL
Evropa
1995 Excavations at Pokrovka, Russia
400.000 Jahre Schöningen Speere

A AegeaNet: AnthroNet
Ancient Vienne

Antiquités grecques, étrusques et romaines

Archaeologia Bulgarica
...
Atlantis expedition

B Backtrack Archaeology - Scottish Archaeology Online Arch. ilustrace, CAD grafika.
Balearic Prehistoric Archaeology

The Black Sea Odyssey

Bristol Archaeology Server
The British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara ... The BSR Pompeii Project C The Caesar Project Campanaio, Sicily: A Geophysical Survey 1995 Prùmysl. aktivity zemìdìl. osídlení. The "Camp de César" Carta del Rischio del Patrimonio Culturale Celts and Saxons Home Page Classics and Mediterranean Archaeology Ideální projekt pro zaèáteèníky. Corinth Computer Project (3D modeling, GIS)

45. The Ancient World Web: Archaeology
archeology discussion board to discuss any topic of interest in archeology. ArchTerraArchTERRA is an european project dedicated to extending the european
http://www.julen.net/ancient/Archaeology/
@import "http://www.julen.net/ancient/ancient-adv.css";
The Archaeology Index
Subcategories Archaeoastronomy
Biblical

Discoveries

Megaliths
...
Underwater

The Links Aegean Prehistory Web Resources
A meta-index focused solely on Aegean prehistory.
[Last Site Update: 28-Aug-1999 Hits: 4000 Rating: 7.41 Votes: 12] Rate It Aerial Archaeology (Francesca Radcliffe)
Francesca Radcliffe's collection of aerial photography is fantastic. Her goal is to identify the archaeological features seen, map them, and share the information with scholars, students, and landowners. [English]
[Last Site Update: 15-Jun-2001 Hits: 2650 Rating: 8.33 Votes: 3] Rate It Alamannenmuseum Ellwangen
The Alamannenmuseum Ellwangen focuses on the archaeology of 260 AD to 750 AD in Southern Germany [German] [Last Site Update: 8-Nov-2000 Hits: 748 Rating: 10.00 Votes: 5] Rate It An Archaeologist's Diary Glimpse at the life of a real archaeologist who works in Egypt and the Sudan... and more (photos, history, travel)! [English] [Last Site Update: 14-Nov-2002 Hits: 1345 Rating: 8.33 Votes: 3] Rate It Anasazi Heritage Center This museum website offers up information about the museum itself, virtual exhibits about ancient Anasazi villages and artifacts, and a nicely done FAQ about the Anasazi. [English]

46. ARCHEOLOGICAL-HISTORICAL TOUR: Archeology, First European, Caucasus
You are here Home » North America » Georgia » ARCHEOLOGICALHISTORICALTOUR, Trip Listing Service, Home. ARCHEOLOGICAL-HISTORICAL TOUR.
http://www.infohub.com/TRAVEL/SIT/sit_pages/13058.html
You are here: Home North America Georgia Trip Listing Service ... Home Categories Active Adventure
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Backroad CityEscape Unique Stays Castle Hotel Eco Lodge Outdoors Fishing Lodge Guest Ranch Hunting Lodge Resorts Diving Golf Naturist Spa Are you interested? Want to learn more about this tour, order travel brochures, pose questions to the tour operator or book this tour? Click for details.
ARCHEOLOGICAL-HISTORICAL TOUR
Visit Georgia
Click here for info Georgia is a country of ancient history and culture. Many ancient towns can be found here, some of which are still to be excavated. Fascinating sites such as these make Georgia an ideal place for archaeological tours. The entire history of Georgia is determined by its geographic location, lying as it does between the East and the West. As a crossroads of ancient Eurasian cultures on the Northern boundaries of Near Eastern civilisations, Georgia has sites of worldwide importance covering every single archaeological period. Several 1.7 million year-old skulls of Homo Erectus from Southern Georgia have become the most sensational discovery of our times. These skulls were found while excavating the mediaeval city of Dmanisi. They are the oldest evidence of hominids (our common ancestors) on the Eurasian continent.

47. Archaeology - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Archaeology (or archeology) is the scientific study of human cultures archaeology;Archaeology of the Americas; Australian archaeology; european archaeology;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archeology

48. Vinland Archeology
These finds confirm L Anse aux Meadows as the earliest european settlement yetknown in North America. Vinland archeology Quicktime 1.5Mb Get plugin,
http://www.mnh.si.edu/vikings/voyage/subset/vinland/archeo.html
L'Anse aux Meadows
[Enlarge]
In 1960 Helge Ingstad and his wife Anne Stine Ingstad were searching for archeological evidence of Vikings in Labrador and Newfoundland. In the small village of L'Anse aux Meadows on the northern tip of Newfoundland they met a fisherman named George Decker who showed them sod foundations that had the shape of Viking longhouses. More than a decade of archeological investigation at this site has proved conclusively that Vikings had built a settlement in North America 500 years before Columbus, just as the sagas say. The evidence at the site also suggests that more southerly voyages might have taken place, and that other settlements might be found. Archeologists believe L'Anse aux Meadows was a base camp which afforded a way-station to further explorations of North America.
Longhouse in Cult3D
[View 3D]
[Get plugin] Excavations revealed a number of artifacts that are diagnostic of a Viking site. From 1961 until 1968, the Ingstad excavations uncovered Viking artifacts including a ringed pin, a soapstone spindle whorl, a bone pin, a whetstone, iron boat rivets, worked wood and other objects. There was evidence of iron-smelting and forging, and hearth charcoal is dated to A.D. 1000. The style and construction of the three longhouses and outbuildings are identical to 11th century Iceland and Greenland. The artifacts indicated weaving and iron-working, activities which were not practiced by Native Americans until after A.D. 1500. These finds confirm L'Anse aux Meadows as the earliest European settlement yet known in North America.

49. ARCHEOLOGY
archeology ARC 309 european Mediterranean Prehistory ART ART105 Painting and DrawingI ART 305 Advanced Painting and Drawing I ART HISTORY ART 331 History
http://www.susqu.edu/study_abroad/aix/IAUcoursetitles.htm
SU en Provence, France – Fall 2004
SU International Core Academics and course information All courses are offered at the Institute for American Universities in the heart of Aix-en-Provence, France. There is a wide variety of courses taught in English and in French. Courses in subjects ranging from Art and Archeology to Political Science and Psychology allow virtually any student to study abroad in France while still completing the courses needed for graduation at SU. All courses count for 3 credits, and a minimum of 15 credits per semester constitutes a normal full-time load. All students are strongly encouraged to take at least one course in French language.
Courses available – Fall 2004 Courses that count for Susquehanna University CORE Full course descriptions with pre-approved credit information. ARCHEOLOGY ARC 309: European Mediterranean Prehistory ART ART105: Painting and Drawing I ART 305: Advanced Painting and Drawing I ART HISTORY ART 331: History of Western Art Survey: Prehistory to the Middle Ages ART 381: The 19th Century and French Impressionism ART 416/LIT 416/PHI 416: The Tragic Vision BUSINESS BUS 301: Introduction to International Business BUS 303: International Management ECONOMICS ECO 301: International Economics and the European Union EDUCATION EDU 301: European Education Practicum FRENCH CIVILIZATION FRE 331: Contemporary French Civilization (taught in French) FRENCH HISTORY HIS 309: History and Now I (taught in French) HIS 325: Provençal Civilization (taught in French) FRENCH LANGUAGE FRE 101: Beginning French I(101 students also take FRE 113)

50. European Archaeology - Encyclopedia Article About European Archaeology. Free Acc
european Archaeology Archaeology (or archeology) is the scientific study of pasthuman cultures through the recovery, documentation and analysis of material
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

51. Archeology Of The Americas - Encyclopedia Article About Archeology Of The Americ
of the Americas is the study of the archeology Archaeology (or archeology) is the thecultures of the New World in the era before significant european influence
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Archeology of the Americas
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Archeology of the Americas
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition The Archeology of the Americas is the study of the archeology 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
Click the link for more information. of North America North America is the third largest continent in area and the fourth ranked in population. It is bounded on the north by the Arctic Ocean, on the east by the North Atlantic Ocean, on the south by the Caribbean Sea, and on the west by the North Pacific Ocean. It covers an area of 9,355,000 square miles (24,230,000 square kilometres). In 2001 its population was estimated at 454,225,000. North
Click the link for more information.

52. European Trips - CSI Tours
european Trips for 2004 Have been postponed since our overseas guide is Activitiesfestivals, arts crafts, Roman Byzantine art, architecture archeology.
http://www.csitours.com/europeantrips.html
top Summer Trips Winter Trips European Trips Reservations ... Back to Main Page
European Trips for 2004
Have been postponed since our overseas guide is stationed in Baghdad, Iraq
Sorry for any inconvience this may cause.
Experience a ten-day natural or cultural trek to the Black Sea, Balkan Mountains, Transylvanian Alps, or the Straits of Gibraltar. We specialize in the less visited places of southern Europe where we immerse you in the local culture. Some trips are in areas where good roads and hotels exist, where we combine excitement with comfort. Those to deserts, mountains, and wilderness regions where we walk, trek, or boat are necessarily more rugged and participatory. Either way, we choose locations where our travelers are both safe and welcome. If you have a natural curiosity about the world, you might find what you’re looking for here.
Discover Eastern Europe
**Special
Events Trips**
**Duration**
**Cost USD**
Bulgaria: Festival of the Roses 10 Days $1090 USD This historic sightseeing tour takes you not only to the Valley of Roses, but also to ancient monasteries, castles, Roman ruins, and Black Sea villages. Brought from Persia more than three hundred years ago, the oil producing Damascus Rose found splendid soil in the Tundja River Valley between the Stara Panina and Sredna Gora Mountains. The valley soon became known all over the world as the "valley of Roses." The roses and the rose-oil production bring a unique atmosphere to this valley where you will see rose picking and the traditional rose-oil distillation process. In the village of Kazanluk celebrate the festival and later pick rose petals yourself with the workers in the fields.

53. NOVA Online | Sultan's Lost Treasure | Asia's Undersea Archeology
socalled treasure junks greatly outsized european ships of the day. But did theyreally exist? Treasure ships a myth? Nothing in the archeological record so
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sultan/archeology2.html
Asia's Undersea Archeology
Back to Part 1

Evidence from South Korea
How typical or representative was the Quanzhou ship of Asian ships of its time? While the process of archeological comparison has only begun and will require more data, additional information is available from two important shipwreck sites in South Korea.
From 1976 to 1982, archeologists excavated a rich cargo from a submerged wreck near Shinan, and this initial work was followed by excavation and recovery of the ship's remaining structure. These remains are now undergoing conservation treatment at the Mokpo Conservation and Restoration Center of South Korea's Cultural Properties Research Institute, and a one-fifth-scale model has been built at the Mokpo Center to aid in the analysis of the ship's structure. Experts dated the shipwreck to 1323 using an associated wooden cargo tag and coins, the latest of which were minted in 1310 and may be of South Chinese origin.
So far, this ship's cargo has attracted the most attention. The cargo included at least 16,000 ceramic items and over seven million brass-bronze coins (totaling over 26 tons). These coins provided a dramatic example of recycling and reuse in the archeological record, since the oldest coin in this collection dated to A.D. 14.
As this animation of the Brunei wreck shows, careful mapping of a shipwreck can provide archeologists with an understanding of where cargo was stored in a ship before it sank.

54. NOVA Online | Sultan's Lost Treasure | Asia's Undersea Archeology
The archeology of the Quanzhou ship presents evidence of an oceangoing commercialvessel comparable in size to the largest known european merchant ships of its
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sultan/archeology.html
Overseas trading of fine porcelain and other objects began in China during the Song Dynasty. Asia's Undersea Archeology
by Richard Gould
Seaborne commerce on a large scale in Asia dates to the Song Dynasty of China (A.D. 960-1270). The Mongols in the succeeding Yuan Dynasty (ca. 1271-1368) went on to build even more ships on a grand scale, and during his stay at the imperial court from 1275 to 1292, Marco Polo described four-masted, seagoing merchant ships with watertight bulkheads and crews of up to 300. Early in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), an expansion of seaborne trade took place with the construction of an immense treasure fleet reported to consist of 317 ships when it was assembled in Nanjing in 1405 that made trading cruises throughout the Indian Ocean and the China seas (see Ancient Chinese Explorers
Ming seaborne commerce declined rapidly during the mid-15th century as a result of conflict between the court and the merchants over control of the trade. The emperor eventually declared the construction of any ship with more than two masts a capital offense, authorized the destruction of all oceangoing ships and the arrest of merchants who sailed them, and declared it a crime even to go to sea in a multimasted ship.
Shipbuilding in the Song, Yuan, and Ming

55. European References Of TARNIUM Sarl
RISKUE Video project (european research) Writing, production and Environmentalrisks, Global change, Cultural heritage, archeology, Health, Nuclear, Public
http://www.tarnium.fr/Referen.htm
EUROPEAN REFERENCES Research projects
  • STALAGMITE : Sustainable Management of Groundwater in Karstic Environments
    Contract INCO-Copernicus : Development of a mathematical model and a decision making tool for karstic groundwater management in Bulgaria, Slovakia and Slovenia (European Commission, DG XII) (1998-2001)
    RES-MAN-MED : Resource Management in the Karstic areas of the Coastal Regions of the Mediterranean. Contract INCO-DC. Groundwater, Soil, Karst Heritage Protection in Lebanon, Malta, Turkey. Database, Modeling, Mapping, and GIS implementation and testing. (European Commission, DG XII) (1997-2000)
Development of spatial decision support system based on Geographical Information System (GIS) Thematics
Water management, Flood hazards , Seismic and environmental risks, Global change, Biodiversity and NATURA 2000 Demonstration projects
  • EON2000+ (European research and demonstration project. Environnemental Directorate). Earth Observation for Natura 2000.Identification of main stakeholders in France - parks managers - Analysis of User requirements for environmental state and pressure indicators, Habitats mapping, satellite images and GIS inputs. (running project).
    NATURE-GIS (European thematic network) for Protected Areas / Nature Preservation and Geographical information. User requirements analysis (European Commission - IT directorate) (running project).

56. Xap.com :: Career Details :: Anthropology And Archeology Teachers, Postsecondary
Archeological Studies, add Archeological Studies to XapPack. Central/Easterneuropean History, add Central/Eastern european History to XapPack.
http://www.xap.com/career/careerdetail/career25-1061.00.html
existing users If you've created an account on any Xap-powered site , log on here:
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career details :: anthropology and archeology teachers, postsecondary
Description
Teach courses in anthropology or archeology.
Experience
Extensive skill, knowledge, and experience are needed for these occupations. Many require more than five years of experience. For example, surgeons must complete four years of college and an additional five to seven years of specialized medical training to be able to do their job.
Education A bachelor's degree is the minimum formal education required for these occupations. However, many also require graduate school. For example, they may require a master's degree, and some require a Ph.D., M.D., or J.D. (law degree). Training Employees may need some on-the-job training, but most of these occupations assume that the person will already have the required skills, knowledge, work-related experience, and/or training. Tasks
  • Prepares and delivers lectures to students.
  • 57. SULAIR: Archeology
    Slavic and Eastern european Studies. archeology. Retrospective. SOVETSKAIA ARKHEOLOGICHESKAIALITERATURA. BIBLIOGRAFIIA. Leningrad, AN SSSR (later Nauka), 1959.
    http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/slavic/3archeol.html
    skip to main navigation Articles A-Z Humanities and Area Studies Engineering Social Sciences Interdisciplinary Government Numeric Data Archive of Recorded Sound Biology (Falconer) Bing Wing Business (Jackson) Eng.(Swain) Earth Sciences (Branner) East Asia Education (Cubberley) Engineering Government Docs. (Jonsson) Green Library Hoover Institution Information Center Lane Reading Room Law (Crown) Map Collections Marine Biology (Miller) Sciences Media and Microtext Medical (Lane) Meyer Music Physics Special Collections Social Science Social Science Resource Center Stanford Auxiliary Library SLAC Library
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    Slavic and Eastern European Studies
    Archeology
    Retrospective
    SOVETSKAIA ARKHEOLOGICHESKAIA LITERATURA. BIBLIOGRAFIIA . Leningrad, AN SSSR (later Nauka), 1959-.
    • 1918-1940 in 1965; 1941-1957 in 1959; 1958-1962 in 1969; 1963-1967 in 1975 and continued in five-year volumes.
    Current
    INION. NOVAIA LITERATURA PO SOTSIAL'NYM I GUMANITARNYM NAUKAM: ISTORIIA, ARKHEOLOGIIA. ETNOGRAFIIA. Moscow, INION, 1992- earlier: INION.

    58. Marija Gimutas
    Gimbutas collected european folk songs and stories while still in high school, thenwent on to study archeology, ethnology, and linguistics at universities in
    http://www.kindredarts.com/kindredarts/articles/gimbutas.html
    Marija Gimutas: 1921 - 1994
    Grandmother of a Movement
    by Marguerite Rigoglioso T O THIS DAY, A LEGEND PERSISTS IN MALTA, a tiny archipelago just south of Sicily, where the remains of the oldest megalithic stone structures in the world still stand. Dating as far back as 3,500 B.C., a thousand years older than the Egyptian pyramids, these temples, built out of huge rocks, some of which weigh several tons, were most likely dedicated to female deities and administered by priestesses. Local legend says that a great giantess constructed one of the temples in a single day as she carried her baby under her arm. That story is an apt metaphor for women today who are working and tending families. But the tale has perhaps no stronger parallel than in the life of the archeologist Marija (pronounced "Maria") Gimbutas, who died in 1994 at the age of 73. Gimbutas literally escaped the advancing Soviet front in her homeland in Lithuania in 1944 with, as her biographer Joan Marler tells us, "her dissertation under one arm and Danute [her infant son] in the other." In that dissertation were the seeds of Gimbutas's later work, synthesizing archeology, mythology, and linguistics in a reconstruction of ancient Europe that challenges assumptions about the origins of human society. Physically diminutive but an academic giant, Gimbutas undertook a great intellectual labor: to recover a time when divinity was female and women were honored. One might say that she built the Goddess temple all over again.

    59. Internet African History Sourcebook
    At U Michigan Guide to web sites on Romans and Roman archeology in Africa. BeninRichard Eden Decades of the New World, 1555 At WSU european traders at the
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/africa/africasbook.html
    Halsall Home Ancient History Sourcebook Medieval Sourcebook Modern History Sourcebook
    Other History Sourcebooks: East Asian Indian Islamic Jewish ... Science Internet
    African History
    Sourcebook Africa is both the most clearly defined of continents - in its geography - and the hardest to pin down in historical terms. Human beings originated in Africa and, as a result, there is more diversity of human types and societies than anywhere else. It is not possible, in any non-ideological way, to claim any one of these peoples or societies as more essentially "African" than others; nor is it possible to exclude a given society as "not really African". On this site historical sources on the history of human societies in the continent of Africa are presented, when available, without making prejudgements about what is "African". This page is a subset of texts derived from the three major online Sourcebooks listed below. For more contextual information, for instance about the Islamic world, check out these web sites. Notes: In addition to direct links to documents, links are made to a number of other web resources.

    60. By The Scriptures, Anthropology, Archeology What We Can Prove. If You Have Had A
    OPENING ASSERTIONS. 1 If the cult calling themselves Jews were descendants of theIsraelites, then every other european they produced children with over the
    http://arabisraelites.fortunecity.net/f2100.htm
    To E-mail this web page after it is completely loaded
    Left click on File
    Left click on Send
    Left click on Page by E-mail Anthropology / Family Trees If you come to this page and just read this summary of assertions, it is proof of nothing but of something I wrote on this web page. I put this series together over a matter of months. The arguments and evidence is contained on this series of pages. You can come back to the series when you can dedicate your investigation if you do not have time now. If you use live chat on Yahoo, the series on family trees is set up so you and your friends can discuss the assertions / evidence as you click through the pages together. If you will let me present my case, read the whole series and then cast your verdict. OPENING ASSERTIONS #1 If the cult calling themselves Jews were descendants of the Israelites, then every other European they produced children with over the last 2,500 years would be Israelites. #2 By anthropology studies of skulls we know what the native people of the middle east looked like in the Old Testament period and the "Jews" do not have the physical features of the middle east native people. #3 The scriptures reveal what people the Israelites came from ( a composite of Arabs ) #4 The scriptures reveal that the Israelites married and produced children with all the Arab nations around them and of course today there would be millions of Arabs who are descendants of the Israelites.

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