Papers by Zeynep Kuşdil Sak
Kazı Sonuçları Toplantısı , 2024
2022 arkeolojik kazı sezonu süresince höyük üzerindeki çalışmalar Alan 1, 7 ve 8'de yoğunlaşmış, ... more 2022 arkeolojik kazı sezonu süresince höyük üzerindeki çalışmalar Alan 1, 7 ve 8'de yoğunlaşmış, Tapınak XVI üzerinde koruma çalışmaları yapılmış, restorasyon, konservasyon, zooarkeolojik, arkeobotanik çalışmaları kazı evinde gerçekleştirilirken, heykel parçaları üzerinde yapılan restorasyon ve konservasyon çalışmalarına Hatay Müzesindeki laboratuvarda devam edilmiştir.
42. Kazı Sonuçları Toplantısı, 2023
The Canadian Society for Mesopotamian Studies Journal, 2022
Notes from the Field / Carnet de recherche 45 five different time periods and a wide variety of a... more Notes from the Field / Carnet de recherche 45 five different time periods and a wide variety of artifact types and materials. The time periods represented are Pre-Pottery Neolithic, Early Bronze Age I, Early Bronze Age IV, Middle Bronze Age II, and the Iron Age. Artifacts include the plastered human skull, a mudbrick, stone and bronze weapons, some domestic tools, objects of adornment, and a variety of vessel types. Each is illustrated by a high resolution colour image photographed for this project by the ROM's staff. Viewers can click on each image to access a detailed description of the object, its archaeological context, publications for further information, and a link to the ROM's digital entry. Unfortunately, no objects from Dhiban could be included in the gallery, even though material from both Jericho and Dhiban travelled from Queen's to the ROM. After creating an acquisition code for the Queen's Dhiban material, the ROM unfortunately continued to use the same code as an open series for subsequent acquisitions from Dhiban. As a consequence, ROM personnel no longer know which Dhiban objects arrived via Queen's. This context may lie in ASOR's archives, but at the time we conducted our research, it was not possible to access the relevant files. To learn more about the Queen's Museum of Near Eastern Archaeology, we invite you to view the virtual exhibit. Richardson has also archived her research and sources of information on the Queen's server (Richardson 2019). This research and exhibit benefitted from the assistance of many people at Queen's, the Royal Ontario Museum, the Non-Professional Archaeological Photographs (NPAPH) project, ASOR Publications, and Margot Tushingham. Please visit the acknowledgements page on the virtual display for a full listing. We hope that by reviving the Queen's Museum of Near Eastern Archaeology in a virtual format, we can bring attention to a forgotten chapter in Canadian scholars' involvement in Near Eastern Archaeology and support future research.
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Papers by Zeynep Kuşdil Sak