Results 311 to 320 of about 566,201 (362)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Public Archaeology, Archaeology and the Public
2020Public archaeology is a flexible notion with several meanings: public engagement in protecting archaeological heritage, public interest in the results of research, and archaeology as a public service offered by qualified staff. Such a broad range of purposes and approaches involves various professionals and includes new disciplines supporting ...
Jeannette Papadopoulos +1 more
openaire +1 more source
Cotswold Archaeology and Suffolk Archaeology merge
2021The Archaeologist, No.
Holbrook, Neil, Gardner, Rhodri
openaire +1 more source
Exhibiting Archaeology: Archaeology and Museums
Annual Review of Anthropology, 2010From their beginnings, archaeology museums have reflected a complex and dynamic balance between the demands of developing, documenting, and preserving objects on the one hand and sharing knowledge, access, and control on the other. This balance has informed and inflected the ways that museums present the past, including both practical aspects of ...
openaire +1 more source
Nautical Archaeology and Biblical Archaeology
The Biblical Archaeologist, 1990The relationship between nautical archaeology and biblical archaeology has been apparent since the first ancient shipwreck was excavated in its entirety off Cape Gelidonya, Turkey, in 1970.
openaire +1 more source
Archaeological Theories and Archaeological Sciences
2015AbstractArchaeological theory and archaeological science have traditionally been characterized as concerned with different issues and unable to interact productively. In this chapter, we present a brief history of the relationship between these two subdisciplines, and some clarification of the differences between scientific archaeology and ...
Marcos Martinón-Torres, David Killick
openaire +1 more source
2002
This chapter of the book International Review of Biblical Studies Volume 55 presents abstracts and summaries of articles and books. The books are classified under the following categories: Biblical Archaeology: general - history of research - historical periods; Palestine: regions - sites; Jerusalem; and Sites outside of Palestine - holy places ...
openaire +1 more source
This chapter of the book International Review of Biblical Studies Volume 55 presents abstracts and summaries of articles and books. The books are classified under the following categories: Biblical Archaeology: general - history of research - historical periods; Palestine: regions - sites; Jerusalem; and Sites outside of Palestine - holy places ...
openaire +1 more source
Liberating archaeology, liberation archaeologies, and WAC
Archaeologies, 2006WAC ha desafiado la nocion constante que la arqueologia es objetiva y apolitica. Esta nocion ha alienado a los indigenas porque tiende a deshumanizar tanto a ellos como a sus antecesores. WAC reconocio que la arqueologia existe en un contexto politico, que debe ser considerado en cualquier construccion y uso del pasado.
openaire +1 more source
Maya Archaeology and Ethnohistory
Ethnohistory, 1979* Preface (Norman Hammond and Gordon R. Willey) * Introduction (Gordon R. Willey and Norman Hammond) * Theoretical Interpretations *1. Priests, Peasants, and Ceremonial Centers: The Intellectual History of a Model (Marshall Joseph Becker) *2. Cropping Cash in the Protoclassic: A Cultural Impact Statement (Bruce H. Dahlin) *3.
Marvin Cohodas +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Public Archaeology and Indigenous Archaeology
2012AbstractPublic archaeology, as a method of involving public groups in the practice of archaeology, has a powerful possibility of benefiting tribal groups by allowing their full involvement. Indigenous archaeology utilizes the general elements of archaeological theory associated with cultural historical, processual, and post-processual approaches.
openaire +1 more source
Archaeology, Archaeological Science, and Microarchaeology
2010The archaeological record is mainly composed of materials related to past human behavior. Some of these are visible to the naked eye – the so-called macroscopic record – and some require instruments, such as microscopes or spectrometers, to be seen and characterized.
openaire +1 more source

