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      A Global Perspective on the Past: The Institute of Archaeology Around the World

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            This map is based on the Butterfly Map, an Octahedral System of Projection invented by Bernard Joseph Stanislaus Cahill in the first decade of the 20th century. A redrawn version (thanks to Letty Ten Harkel) is presented here. For more information, visit: http://www.genekeyes.com/B.J.S._CAHILL_RESOURCE.html.

            Note: For projects with a regional focus, a single dot has been placed in the centre of the region concerned. Projects that have a broader theoretical or conceptual focus and cannot be regionally situated are not included on the map. See the Institute of Archaeology website for further details: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/projects.

            The Institute of Archaeology in the Americas

            1. Peru. Cuzco. Ceramic production and monumental stonework during the emergence and expansion of the Inca State. Bill Sillar with University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Ministerio de Cultura, Cuzco.

            2. Peru. Sican. Metallurgy book, based on excavations of metalworking and production at Batan Grande in Northern Coastal Peru. John Merkel with Southern Illinois University.

            3. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. Puerto Ayacucho. Cotúa Island-Orinoco Reflexive Archaeology Project. Jose Oliver with Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas - Center of Anthropology.

            4. Ecuador and Peru. Amazonian Dark Earths in Western Amazonia. Archaeological Survey of the Napo River Basin. Manuel Arroyo-Kalin.

            5. Mesoamerica. Resilient Networks and the Historical Ecology of Q’eqchi’ Maya Swidden Agriculture. Sean Downey with University of Arizona.

            5. Mesoamerica. Resilient Networks and the Historical Ecology of Q’eqchi’ Maya Swidden Agriculture. Sean Downey with University of Arizona.

            6. Brazil. Multiple cities including Sao Paulo. Barkcloth from the Brazilian Amazon. Renata Peters with Museu de Arqueologia e Etnologia, Universidade de Sao Paulo.

            7. Colombia. Bogotá. Gold Museum. Archaeometallurgy. Marcos Martinón-Torres with Museo del Oro, Bogotá.

            8. Belize. Lamanai. Investigating British Colonial Activity; Improving Public Access to Artefact Collections. Elizabeth Graham with University of Arizona, Institute of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize.

            9. Belize. Ambergris Caye. Anthropogenic Landscape Transformation at the Site of Marco Gonzalez. Elizabeth Graham, Richard Macphail and Manuel Arroyo- Kalin, with UCL Civil, Environmental, Geomatic Engineering; UCL Geography; RBGE; University of Belize.

            10. Cuba. Cemetery of El Chorro de Maíta. Marcos Martinón-Torres with Cuban Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment; British Museum.

            11. USA. Louisiana. Cane River African Diaspora Archaeology Project. Kevin MacDonald with US National Park Service.

            12. USA. Las Capas, Tucson, Arizona. Native American Irrigation at Las Capas. Richard McPhail.

            13. USA. Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California. Ceramic Production and Distribution at Late Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherer Seasonal Occupation site CA-SDI-813. Patrick Quinn with San Diego Archaeological Center, California.

            14. Canada. Ontario. Complex Hunter-Gatherers of the Trent Valley. Excavation of a set of Archaic through Middle Woodland sites. Sue Colledge with Department of Anthropology, Trent University, Ontario.

            The Institute of Archaeology in Africa

            15. African Continent. Larger Molars and Robust Jaws in Early Hominins. Anna Clement. Collections held at University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and national museums of Pretoria, Addis Ababa, Nairobi, Kenya, Tanzania.

            16. Sierra Leone. Materializing and Mediating the Past in Sierra Leone. Paul Basu with Monuments and Relics Commission, Sierra Leone; Sierra Leone National Museum; British Museum Africa Programme.

            17. Ethiopia. Gamo Highlands. Dorian Fuller with University of Southern Florida.

            18. Ethiopia. Mieso. Ignacio de la Torre with Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona; Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana, Spain.

            19. Mali. Segou Project Sorotomo and the Dodugu (AD 1000-1700). Kevin MacDonald with Malian Institut des Sciences Humaines.

            20. Mali. Lower Tilemsi Valley Project. Katie Manning with Direction National du Patrimoine Culturelle, Bamako, Mali.

            21. Sudan. Merowe Dam Archaeological Salvage Project. Katie Manning with British Museum and Sudan Archaeological Research Society.

            22. Sahara Sahel borderlands. 5000 Years of Pottery from the Sahara Sahel Borderlands. Katie Manning with University of East Anglia.

            23. Tanzania. Olduvai Gorge. Ignacio de la Torre with University of Wisconsin and Department of Antiquities, Tanzania.

            The Institute of Archaeology in Asia

            24. Multiple locations. Turkey, Iraq, India, Bangladesh, China. Comparative Pathways to Agriculture (ComPAg). Dorian Fuller, Chris Stevens, Charlene Murphy, Leilani Lucas, Eleanor Kingwell-Banham and additional collaborators Cristina Castillo, Ulrike Sommer, Hanna Sosnowska, Alison Weisskopf, Elizabeth Fairbrother, and Ling Qin, with: the Directorate of Antiquities of Suleymaniyah Province; Deccan College; UCLA; Jahangirnagar, Jilin, Hebrew, Peking, Stanford universities; the Institute of Cultural Heritage and Archaeology of Yunnan; and Guangdong Provincial Institute of Cultural Heritage and Archaeology.

            25. Iraq. Ivories from Nimrud. Stuart Laidlaw.

            26. Iraqi Kurdistan. Later Prehistory of the Shahrizor Plain. David Wengrow with UCL Qatar.

            27. Iraq. Jarmo, Kurdistan. Neolithic. Dorian Fuller with Directorate of Antiquities, Suleymaniyah Province.

            28. Turkmenistan. Ancient Merv Project. Tim Williams and Gai Jorayev with Ministry of Culture of Turkmenistan; ‘Ancient Merv’ State Archaeological Park; Centre for Applied Archaeology; UCL Qatar; Heritage Without Borders; CraTerre‐ENSAG, Grenoble; Oxford University; and CyArk.

            29. Kazakhstan. Otrar. The medieval Silk Road City. Giles Dawkes (CAA) and Gay Jorayev; with UCL Qatar; Archaeological Expertise (Kazakhstan).

            30. India. Sanchi Survey Project. Julia Shaw with Department of Archaeology, Museums and Archives, Madhya Pradesh, Bhopal; and University of Leeds.

            31. India. Archaeologies of Environmental Ethics in Ancient India. Julia Shaw.

            32. China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, Islands of South East Asia. Multiple locations. Early Rice Project. Dorian Fuller, Alison Weisskopf, Cristina Castillo, Fabio Silva, Melissa Tan, Nikolah Gilligan, with: Peking, Sydney, Otago, James Cook, Australian National universities; Zhejiang Province Institute of Archaeology; Suzhou Museum Archaeology Team; Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute; and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and University of Hawaii.

            33. China. Xi’an, First Emperor’s Mausoleum. The Making of the Terracotta Army. Marcos Martinón-Torres, Andrew Bevan, Janice Li, Thilo Rehren, Patrick Quinn with Museum of Emperor Qin Shihuang’s Mausoleum, Xi’an.

            34. China. Early Glass and Pigments from Majiayuan Cemetery, Gansu Province. Yi- Xian Lin and Ian Freestone with Gansu Provincial Institute of Archaeology.

            35. South Korea. Han Tan river. Richard Macphail with Seoul National University.

            36. Indonesia. Nusa Tenggara. Sean Downey with National Science Foundation, USA.

            The Institute of Archaeology in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific

            37. Kingdom of Bhutan. National Inventory. Tim Williams and Andrew Bevan with Department of Culture, Bhutan; National Commission of UNESCO, Bhutan; Cultural Heritage Information Consultants.

            38. Numerous countries. UNESCO Serial Transnational World Heritage Nominations of the Silk Roads Project. Tim Williams and Gai Jorayev with active State Party partners: Afghanistan, People’s Republic of China, Republic of India, Islamic Republic of Iran, Republic of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, Republic of Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Republic of Uzbekistan. Organisations: ICOMOS, ICAHM, UNESCO World Heritage Centre, UNESCO Almaty Cluster Office, UNESCO Cluster Office in Tashkent, and UCL.

            39. Easter Island, Rapa Nui. Landscapes of Construction Project. Sue Hamilton with Universities of Bournemouth, Manchester, Highlands and Islands, Chile Santiago, Hawaii Pacific; Rapa Nui National Parks Authority; Museo Antropológico Padre Sebastián Englert.

            40. Banks Islands. Vanuatu. Feasting Objects and Places in the Banks Islands. Sarah Byrne.

            41. New Zealand. Auckland. Interrogating Archaeological Data for Climatic Information. Martin Bridge with Auckland University Dendrochronology Laboratory.

            42. Australia, Canada, Germany, Portugal, Norway, Spain, Sweden, UK, USA. Assembling Alternative Future for Heritage. Rodney Harrison, Martha Fleming, Sarah May and Sefryn Penrose with Universities of Exeter, Linnaeus, York, Minzu (China), Gothenburg; Arts Council England; Association of Independent Museums; China National Academy of Arts; Endangered Languages Project; The Frozen Ark Project; Future Terrains; The Heritage Alliance; International Council of Monuments and Sites; International Union for Conservation of Nature; Royal Botanic Gardens Kew; The National Trust (UK); New School House Gallery (York); New Horizons Message Initiative; NordGen; Rewilding Europe; Svensk Karnbranslehantering AB (SKB)/Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management; Tropenmuseum/ National Museum of World Culture; Wheal Martyn Trust; York Museums Trust.

            The Institute of Archaeology in Britain and Ireland

            1. England. Landscapes of Governance Project. Andrew Reynolds and Stuart Brookes with University of Nottingham.

            2. England. Portsmouth. Tudor Warship Mary Rose. Martin Bridge with Mary Rose Trust.

            3. England. Sherwood Forest, Thynghowe, Hangar Hill. Stuart Brookes.

            4. England. Geochemical Provenance Mapping of Pre-Roman Ironworking Sites in Britain. Michael Charlton and Marcos Martinón-Torres with Historic England.

            5. Britain. Bronze Age Textiles, Basketry and Leather Artefacts from Burials and Cremations. Susanna Harris.

            6. England. Rape of Hastings Architectural Survey. David Martin (CAA/ASE) with Historic England.

            7. England. Whitehawk Camp, Brighton. Neolithic Causewayed Enclosure and Community Archaeology Project. Jon Sygrave, Hilary Orange and Matt Pope (CAA/ASE) with Brighton and Hove City Council; Brighton and Hove Archaeological Society.

            8. England. Lewes, East Sussex. Medieval town. Dan Swift.

            9. England. West Sussex Coastal Plain. David Dunkin, Greg Priestly-Bell and Jon Sygrave (CAA/ASE).

            10. England. Essex, Stanford Le Hope. Richard McPhail with Oxford Archaeology South.

            11. England. Devon. Buckfast. Andrew Reynolds with Newcastle University.

            12. England. Boxgrove. Mark Roberts and Matt Pope.

            13. England. Yorkshire. Boynton House. Tim Schadla-Hall with Durham University.

            14. England. Yorkshire, Star Carr. Tim Schadla- Hall with York University.

            15. Wales. Caerleon, Priory Field. Andrew Gardner with Cardiff University; Cadw, National Roman Legion Museum, Caerleon; National Museum Wales, Cardiff.

            16. Scotland. South Uist, Howmore. Andrew Reynolds.

            17. Isle of Man. Ballanorris Mound. Richard Macphail with School of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, Liverpool University.

            18. Ireland. Cultivating Societies: Assessing the Evidence for Agriculture in Neolithic Ireland. Sue Colledge with Queen’s University, Belfast; and Institute of Archaeology, Oxford.

            19. Jersey. La Cotte de St Brelade. Matt Pope.

            20. England. Essex. Bow Hill Project. Mark Roberts.

            21. England. Blackden Project. Mark Roberts.

            22. England. Exotic Rock Project. Mark Roberts.

            23. England. Clandon Park. Hinemihi Maori Meeting House: People-based Conservation. Dean Sully with Ngäti Ragana; Ngäti Hinemihi; New Zealand Historic Places Trust; National Trust; and ICCROM.

            24. England. The Portable Antiquities Scheme Database as a Tool for Archaeological Research. Roger Bland with Katherine Robbins.

            25. England. Selmeston. East Sussex Early Anglo-Saxon Cemetery. Sue Harrington and Hazel Welch.

            26. England. Corpus of Roman Sculpture from South-East England. Martin Henig with Penny Coombe, Francis Grew, Kevin Haywood; British Academy; Museum of London.

            27. Britain. Composition, Corrosion and Origins of Medieval Window Glass. Ian Freestone with University of York.

            28. Ireland. Dublin. Metalworking in Viking Dublin. Justine Bayley with National Museum of Ireland.

            29. England. Lincoln. Metalwork and Metalworking in Viking Age Lincoln. Justine Bayley with Institute of Archaeology, Oxford.

            30. England. Prittlewell. The Princely Burial. Harriet White, Justine Bayley with MoLA.

            31. England. Chichester. Romanisation of Iron Age Precious Metals. Justine Bayley.

            32. England. Medieval Music Wire. Justine Bayley.

            33. England. Roman and Medieval Silver Production and Refining. Justine Bayley.

            34. Wales. Stones of Stonehenge. Mike Parker Pearson with Universities of Southampton, Bournemouth and Manchester; Dyfed Archaeological Trust.

            35. England. Stones of Stonehenge. Mike Parker Pearson with Universities of Southampton, Bournemouth, Leicester.

            36. England. Selsey Bill, Medmerry, East Sussex. Bronze Age Coastal Settlement and Medieval Fish-weir. Greg Priestley-Bell and Pip Stephenson (CAA/ASE).

            37. England. Broadbridge Heath, West Sussex. Prehistoric, Roman and Medieval Settlement on the Sussex Weald. Andrew Margetts (CAA/ASE).

            38. England. Peacehaven, East Sussex. Extensive Prehistoric Landscape. Diccon Hart (CAA/ASE).

            39. England. Harlow, Essex. Late Iron Age field Systems. Kate Clover (CAA/ASE).

            40. England. Northern/Eastern England. The Bullion Economy of Viking England. Jane Kershaw.

            41. England. Hertfordshire and neighbouring counties. Geophysics. Kris Lockyear, Ellen Shlasko and Andrew Bevan with various archaeological societies.

            42. England. Snodland, Kent Romano-British Villa. Giles Dawkes (CAA/ASE).

            43. England, Hadrian’s Wall. World Heritage Site Management Plan Consultations. Kirsty Norman (CAA/ASE).

            The Institute of Archaeology in London

            Note: London is not depicted in enough detail for individual dots – these projects and collaborations are represented by a single red star.

            1. Science Museum. Developing and Running the April Late event on Wearable Technology. Theano Moussouri.

            2. Hendon School Community Archaeology Project. Gabriel Moshenska.

            3. Thames Discovery Programme. Nathalie Cohen, Gustav Milne and Eliott Wragg.

            4. The Archaeology of Air Raid Shelters: Towards an International Heritage Perspective. Gabriel Moshenska.

            5. The Gresham Ship Project. Dean Sully.

            6. Petrie Museum, UCL. Collections in Exile, Persons in Exile: Rethinking the Petrie Palestinian Collection. Beverley Butler with UCL; Tawfik Canaan Collection; and Birzeit University.

            7. Billingsgate Roman House and Bathhouse. Dean Sully, Kirsty Norman and Tim Williams with the Museum of London; City of London Corporation; and English Heritage.

            8. Roman Glass Production. Ian Freestone with MoLA.

            9. John Dwight’s crucibles. Ian Freestone with Department of Earth Sciences, University of Padova.

            10. Tower of London. The Tudor Mint. Justine Bayley and Harriet White.

            11. Kingsway. Saxon Brass Ingots. Justine Bayley and Thilo Rehren with Museum of London; and CEZ Archäometrie, Mannheim.

            12. Natural History Museum and the V&A. Theano Moussouri and Eleni Vomvyla with the London Knowledge Lab.

            13. Botanic Gardens Conservation International, Kew Gardens. Botanical gardens, social issues and working with communities. Theano Moussouri.

            14. Holland Park, Kensington. Late Iron Age - Romano-British settlement. Sarah Ritchie (CAA/ASE).

            15. United Kingdom. MicroPasts Knowledge Exchanges: Building Sustainability and Informing Policy and Practice. Andrew Bevan and Chiara Bonacchi with British Museum.

            The Institute of Archaeology in the rest of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East

            44. EUROEVOL - The Cultural Evolution of Neolithic Europe. Stephen Shennan, Sue Colledge, Enrico Crema, Sean Downey, Kevan Edinborough, Tim Kerig, Katie Manning and Adrian Timpson.

            45. Norway. Vestfold, E-18 Highway. Richard Macphail with Culture History Museum and Oslo University.

            46. Denmark. Textile and Costume from Bronze and Early Iron Ages in Danish Collections. Margarita Gleba with Centre for Textile Research, University of Copenhagen; and National Museum Denmark.

            47. Iceland. The Reykholt Churches: excavations at a Church Centre; and Reykholt Shielings Project. Gudrun Sveinbjarnardottir with the Institute of Archaeology in Iceland and University of Iceland.

            48. Spain. The Basque Country. Vitoria, Aistra. Andrew Reynolds with University of the Basque Country.

            49. Spain. Córdoba: Heritage of Historic Cities and Multi-culturalism. Beverley Butler with Cordoba University.

            50. Spain. Buendia Rockshelter. Ignacio de la Torre with Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana, Spain.

            51. Spain. Cova Gran. Ignacio de la Torre with Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain; and Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana.

            52. Spain. Roca dels Bous. Ignacio de la Torre with Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain; and Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana.

            53. Spain. Arganzón castle, Burgos. Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo.

            54. Spain. Lantarón castle, Álava. Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo.

            55. Spain. Mugardos, A Coruña. Archaeological - Historical study of Saint Vincent of Meá Church. Stuart Brookes with University of Santiago.

            56. Spain. Almería. Society, Metallurgy and Innovation: The Iberian Hypothesis (SMITH). Mercedes Murillo-Barroso and Marcos Martinón-Torres with University of La Laguna, Spain.

            57. Europe. I-treasures with a focus on Corsica, Sardinia, the Walloon Region of Belgium and North Greece. Marilena Alivizatou.

            58. Spain, Galicia; Portugal, Beira Litoral Sul e Alta Estremadura; UK, Kent, Essex; France, Morbihan. Atlantic Late Bronze Age Interaction through Metal Hoards. Xosé-Lois Armada with Instituto de Arqueologia de Coimbra.

            59. Portugal. Muge, Cabeço da Amoreira. Michele Wollstonecroft with University of the Algarve, Portugal; and Archaeological Research Centre, Lisbon University.

            60. Portugal. Sao Gens, Celorico. A Spatial Analysis of Rock-cut Graves. Stuart Brookes with Universidad de Salamanca, Spain; and Universidades Nova de Lisboa e do Algarve.

            61. Croatia. Early Farming in Dalmatia. Sue Colledge with Rochester University of Technology, New York; and University of Cambridge.

            62. Romania. Noviodunum, Tulcea. Kris Lockyear with Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge; and Southampton University.

            63. Romania, Taşnad. Rescue Excavation of a Criş Settlement. Ulrike Sommer with Satu Mare Museum.

            64. Italy, Marche. Upper Esino Valley Survey. Corinna Riva.

            65. Italy, Central; Spain, South; Greece. Textile Economy and Urbanisation in Mediterranean Europe 1000-500BCE. Margarita Gleba and Susanna Harris.

            66. Greece. Antikythera Survey Project. Andrew Bevan with Trent University, Canada; and Greek Archaeological Service.

            67. Greece. Astypalaia, Dodecanese. Cemeteries on the Island of Astypalaia. Simon Hillson.

            68. Greece. Keos XI. The Wall Paintings from the Northeast Bastion. Stuart Laidlaw with University of Cincinnati.

            69. Greece. Crete. The Knossos Urban Landscape Project. Todd Whitelaw with British School at Athens and Herakleion Ephoreia of the Greek Archaeological Service.

            70. Cyprus. Kissonerga-Mylouthkia. Pre-pottery Neolithic and Calcolithic Settlements and Subsistence Economy. Sue Colledge with Edinburgh University; and Lemba Archaeological Research Centre.

            71. Turkey. The Social Geography of the Catalhoyuk Settlement. Katherine (Karen) Wright with UCL; Universities of Stanford, UC Merced, Southampton, Istanbul, Selcuk, Thrace, Adam Mickiewicz, New York State (SUNY) and Buffalo; and Free University Berlin.

            72. Turkey. Archaeobotany at Çatalhöyük. Dorian Fuller with Stanford University.

            73. Turkey. Textile Production at Miletos. Margarita Gleba with Bochum University, Germany; and German Archaeological Institute in Athens.

            74. Turkey. Technology of Seljuq Ceramics and Glass from Kubad Abad. Ian Freestone with Universities of Cukurova and Ankara.

            75. Turkey. Boncuklu Höyük Project. Louise Martin with Universities of Liverpool, Queensland, Reading, and Harvard.

            76. European Bronze Age Cultures and Technical Evolution: a Phylogenetic Approach. Sébastien Manem.

            77. Material Connections: Mobility, Materiality and Mediterranean Identities. Corinna Riva with UCL and Glasgow University.

            78. Switzerland, Southern France, Germany, Northern Italy. Regional Costume and Identity in the Final Neolithic to Bronze Age: the Statue Menhir Evidence. Susanna Harris and the Freie Universität, Berlin.

            79. Israel/Palestine. Understanding Heritage Wellbeing: Traditional Healers and Eye Care. Beverley Butler with Eye Hospital, Order of St John; Sheikh Jarrah.

            80. Israel. Ramon crater, Negev Desert. Richard McPhail with Ben Gurion University.

            81. Israel, Jordan Valley. Tel Bet Yerah. Early Bronze Age and Early Islamic. David Wengrow with Raphael Greenberg.

            82. Israel. Glass from the Sea. Ian Freestone with Israel Antiquities Authority.

            83. Palestine. Khirbet al Mafjar, Jericho. Dominic Perring (CAA/ASE) with Birzeit University.

            84. Palestine. Collections in Exile, Persons in Exile: Rethinking the Petrie Palestinian Collection (UCL) and the Tawfik Canaan Collection (Birzeit University). Beverley Butler.

            85. Lebanon. Qadisha Valley Project. Epipalaeolithic- Neolithic Excavations at Moghr el-Ahwal. Andrew Garrard, Sue Colledge, Kevan Edinborough, Yvonne Edwards, Richard Macphail and Katherine (Karen) Wright with Lebanese University Beirut; Lampeter.

            86. Lebanon. Sidon. Dafydd Griffiths with British Museum; and Lebanese DGA.

            87. Lebanon. Beirut Souks. Dominic Perring (CAA/ASE) and Tim Williams with American University of Beirut.

            88. Jordan. Kharaneh IV. Epipalaeolithic Excavations. Louise Martin and Sue Colledge with University of California (Berkeley).

            89. Jordan. Azraq Project. Epipalaeolithic- Neolithic Excavations. Andrew Garrard, Sue Colledge, Louise Martin and Katherine (Karen) Wright with Universities of Liverpool, Belfast, Davis California; and CNRS.

            90. Jordan. Ain Ghazal. Kathryn Tubb with British Museum.

            91. Jordan. Talbiyeh and other Palestinian Refugee Camps in Jordan. Beverley Butler with Petra University, Amman.

            92. Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon, Iraq. Cooking, Dining and the Evolution of Early Agricultural Societies. Katherine (Karen) Wright with UCL; CBRL; Universities of Stanford, Cornell, Sheffield, Liverpool, New York Stony Brook, Oxford, Yarmouk, Istanbul, and Lebanese University Beirut.

            93. Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon, Iraq. The Neolithic Beginnings of Craft Specialization: Stoneworking, Ground Stone Artefacts and Social Technology. Katherine (Karen) Wright with diverse institutions (see those listed at entry 93).

            94. Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon, Iraq. Personal Ornaments and the Origins of Stone Beadmaking. Katherine (Karen) Wright, Roseleen Bains and Andrew Garrard, with diverse institutions, see 93 above.

            95. Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon, Iraq. The Ancient Levant: Social Networks and Long-Term Histories. Katherine (Karen) Wright with 25 other scholars from UK universities.

            96. Iraqi Kurdistan. The Shahrizor Research Project. Mark Altaweel, David Wengrow, Dorian Fuller, and Louise Martin with UCL Qatar, University of Texas and Sulaimaniya Directorate of Antiquities and Heritage, and University Munich.

            97. Iraq, Rania Plain. Girdi Bazar Project. Mark Altaweel with University Munich.

            98. Egypt. The Materiality of Administration: the Seals and Seal Impressions from Hierakonopolis. Richard Bussmann.

            99. Egypt. EES Survey of Memphis. David Jeffreys with University of Cambridge; UCL; and AERA.

            100. Egypt. Origins of Nationhood: a New Chronology for Egyptian State Formation. David Wengrow with Research Laboratory for Archaeology and History of Art, Oxford University.

            101. Egypt. Crucible Technology; Late Bronze Age Glass Production. Thilo Rehren and Marcos Martinón-Torres.

            102. Egypt. Zawiet Sultan (el-Minya). Landscape, Archaeology and People in Provincial Egypt Past to Present. Richard Bussmann with Pisa University.

            103. Tunisia. Early Islamic Glass Workshop from Sabra-al-Mansuriya. Ian Freestone with CNRS, France; and Dept of Earth Sciences, Leuven.

            104. Egypt. Decolonising Archaeology: Ethnographies in Egypt. Stephen Quirke with Minya University and New Hermopolis; and Fayoum University.

            105. Egypt. Memphis. Judith Bunbury with EES; and McDonald Institute, Cambridge.

            106. Egypt. Gurob Harem Palace Project, Faiyum. Settlement Archaeology at a Royal Town Site. Jan Picton with Petrie Museum UCL; and Universities of Liverpool, Copenhagen.

            107. Egypt. Byzantine Mosaic Tesserae from Abu Mina. Ian Freestone with Deutsches Archäologisches Institute.

            108. Coin Hoards of the Roman Republic. Kris Lockyear with American Numismatic Society.

            109. Egypt. Mit Rahina Field School: Settlement archaeology in Middle Kingdom Memphis. Ana Tavares with David Jeffreys; Ancient Egypt Research Associates; American Research Centre in Egypt; Ministry of State for Antiquities; Egypt Exploration Society; and Cambridge University.

            110. Egypt. Tell Basta/Bubastis. Glass in Late Antiquity: Society and Science. Daniela Rosenow with German-British-Egyptian Joint Mission (University of Würzburg, EES, and Egyptian Ministry for the State of Antiquities).

            111. Egypt. Tuna el-Gebel. Glass Finds from Tombs 1-7. Daniela Rosenow with German- Egyptian Joint Mission (University of Munich and Cairo University).

            112. Egypt. Tell Mutubis. Late Roman to Early Islamic Glass Finds from the Western Nile Delta. Daniela Rosenow with Egypt Exploration Society.

            113. Egypt. Buto/Tell el Fara’in, Kom el Gir. Glass from the Western Delta and the Application of pXRF. Daniela Rosenow with the German Archaeological Institute Cairo.

            114. Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia. EUROFARM: Comparison and Modelling of Early Farming and Associated Technologies in Europe. Marc Vander Linden and David Orton with Museum of the Republika Srpska; Commission to Preserve National Monuments; Zagreb Archaeological Museum; Institute for Anthropological Research, Croatia; Centre for Conservation and Archaeology of Montenegro; Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade; and Academy of Sciences, Serbia.

            115. Serbia and Bosnia. The Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia: sites of Pločnik, Belovode, Jarmovac Serbia; Gornja Tuzla, Bosnia. Thilo Rehren, Miljana Radivojevic and Stephen Shennan with Universities of Durham and Heidelberg; German Mining Museum; Roman-Germanic Commission; National Museum, Belgrade; Museum in Toplica; Homeland Museum, Priboj on Lim.

            116. Ukraine. Nebelivka Tripillia. Geoarchaeological Research at Mega-site. Manuel Arroyo-Kalin with Durham University.

            117. Educckate ‘Knowledge Alliance’ Project. Sarah Wolferstan and Gai Jorayev (CAA) with consortium of 11 partners from 7 countries.

            118. Heritage Values Network. Dominic Perring (CAA/ASE) with UCL Centre for Sustainable Heritage; Universities of Leiden, Barcelona, and Eindhoven Technology; and Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research.

            Author and article information

            Journal
            2048-4194
            Archaeology International
            Ubiquity Press
            2048-4194
            23 November 2015
            : 18
            : 1
            : 20-32
            Article
            10.5334/ai.1802
            2a46cbf6-e7a2-44b1-922e-54f25ad01dea
            © 2015 The Author(s)

            This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.

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