Archaeology 20140708
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Archaeology 20140708
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ARCHAEOLOGY July/August 2014 16
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Photo Credits
COVERAZA/Archive Zab/Art Resource,
NY; 1Courtesy Josef Wegner, Penn Museum;
3 Courtesy INAH, Photo: de Malton Tapia,
Courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority, Photo:
Clara Amit, CourtesyNew York Public Library
TOC; 4Courtesy Salvador Guilliem Arroyo,
Director Proyecto Tlatelolco; 6Courtesy Doug
Ross, Simon Fraser University; 8Courtesy
Robert Clark; 11Photo: Taylor Hatmaker,
Courtesy Andrew Reinhard, Photo: Bill Caraher;
12Courtesy Andrew Reinhard, Photo: Raiford
Giuns, Wikimedia Commons, $Mathe94$, Photo:
Peter Banyasz; 16Courtesy Ioanna Kakoulli,
UCLA(2), CourtesyNew York Public Library;
17Wikimedia Commons, Brian Stansberry;
18Courtesy INAH, Photo: de Malton Tapia,
Courtesy Guard Archaeology Ltd.; 19PLoS
One; 20Courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority,
Photo: Clara Amit, Courtesy Israel Antiquities
Authority, Photo: Dan Kirzner, Courtesy Israel
Antiquities Authority, Photo: Clara Amit; 21
Wikimedia Commons, hairymuseummatt, Dr.
MikeBaxter; 22Courtesy Gene St. Pierre, Rhode
Island College, Courtesy Rhode Island State Home
and School Project ; 24 (clockwise from top left)
Wikimedia Commons, Courtesy Connie Kelleher,
Wikimedia Commons, Eitan f,CourtesyIoanna
Kakoulli, UCLA, Wikimedia Commons, Fae; 25
Courtesy Odense City Museums, Courtesy Michael
Frachetti, Washington University in St. Louis,
Courtesy Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory,
Wikimedia Commons, PhilipC, Copyright
Trustees of the British Museum; 26HIP / Art
Resource, NY; 27Getty Images; 28Biblioteca
Nazionale Centrale, Florence/The Bridgeman
Art Library, Roger Atwood; 29Roger Atwood,
Getty Images; 30Courtesy Instituto Nacional de
Antropologa e Historia, Programa de Arqueologa
Urbana (3), Roger Atwood; 31Courtesy Instituto
Nacional de Antropologa e Historia, Programa
de Arqueologa Urbana.; 32Roger Atwood
(2); 33Roger Atwood, Courtesy Salvador
Guilliem Arroyo, Director Proyecto Tlatelolco;
34-35Courtesy Museum of Cultural History,
University of Oslo, Norway; 36Copyright Costa
Leemage/The Bridgeman Art Library, Museum
of Cultural History, University of Oslo, Norway.
Photographer: Eirik Irgens Johnsen; 37Courtesy
Per Holck (2); 38Courtesy Per Holck (3),
Courtesy Museum of Cultural History, University
of Oslo, Norway (3); 40Marco Merola (2);
41Courtesy Soprintendenza Etruria Meridionale
(2); 42Marco Merola (all); 43Marco Merola
(all); 44-45Copyright Bettman/Corbis, Courtesy
Landesdenkmalamt Berlin, Photographer: Jan
Trenner; 46 Courtesy Landesdenkmalamt
Berlin, Photographer: Jessica Meyer; 47Courtesy
Landesdenkmalamt Berlin, Photographer: Jan
Trenner, Courtesy Landesdenkmalamt Berlin,
Photographer: Jessica Meyer; 48Courtesy
Landesdenkmalamt Berlin, Photographer: Jessica
Meyer (3); 49Courtesy Jennifer Wegner, Penn
Museum; 50Josef Wegner, Penn Museum,
Jennifer Wegner, Penn Museum, De Agostini
Picture Library/The Bridgeman Art Library; 52
Josef Wegner, Penn Museum (2); 55Photo: Jeff
Oliver, University of Aberdeen; 56Photo: Leaf
Gould,University of Aberdeen, Photo: Jeff Oliver,
University of Aberdeen (3); 58Courtesy Oskar
Sveinbjarnarson, Photo: Jeff Oliver, University of
Aberdeen; 60Photo: Jeff Oliver, University of
Aberdeen; 64Photo: Jeff Oliver, University of
Aberdeen; 68Courtesy L.C. Tiera
www.archaeology.org 63
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ARCHAEOLOGY July/August 2014 64
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Kate Ravilious is a science journalist based
in York, United Kingdom.
FRQWLQXHG IURP SDJH 60
Textile and metal fragments at Hillside
may be the remains of a trunk left
behind during one of the settlements
forced evictions.
EXCAVATE, EDUCATE, ADVOCATE www.archaeological.org
AIA Announces Winners of 2014 Cotsen Excavation Grants
65
W
iiii.x I.ixsox, Associate
Curator of Eurasian Anthro-
pology at the Field Museum
of Natural Iistory in Chicago, and
Darian Marie Totten, Assistant Irofes-
sor in the Department of Classics at
Davidson College in Davidson, North
Carolina, are the winners of the 2014
Cotsen Excavation Grants. Each will
receive an award of $25,000 to support
their excavations and research.
Iarkinson was awarded the Cotsen
Grant for mid-career project direc-
tors to support the nal season of a
multiyear project in Diros Bay on the
Mani Ieninsula of the southern Greek
mainland. Te 2014 eld season will
focus on the Neolithic settlement of
Ksagounaki Iromontory, located just
outside the entrance to Alepotrypa
Cave. Together, Ksagounaki and Ale-
potrypa formed the largest agricultural
settlement in the region at the end of
the Neolithic Ieriod. Iarkinson and
his colleagues Anastasia Iapathana-
siou (Ephoreia of Ialeoanthropology
and Speleology for Southern Greece),
Michael Galaty (Mississippi State Uni-
versity), and Giorgos Iapathanasso-
poulos (Greek Ministry of Culture,
retired) are exploring how early agri-
cultural villages such as Ksagounaki
grew and expanded in the Neolithic.
Understanding the dynamics of village
organization in southern Greece will
enable them to better understand the
cultural background of the important
political and economic transformations
that occurred during the subsequent
Bronze Age, which eventually paved
the way for the emergence of the Myce-
naean states.
Te grant for rst-time project direc-
tors was awarded to Darian Marie Tot-
ten for the Salapia Exploration Iroject.
Totten and her colleagues Roberto
Goredo and Giovanni de Venuto of
the University of Foggia will examine
the complex environmental and human
history of the coastal lagoon of Lago
di Salpi, on the Adriatic coast of Italy.
Vhile the precarious and changeable
coastal landscape posed challenges to
habitation during the Roman, Late
Antique, and Medieval periods, it also
oered benets, such as a natural har-
bor and productive salt pans. Tottens
research program includes two excava-
tions, one at Salapia and the other at San
Vito, and a rigorous geomorphological
study of the lagoon environment. Te
excavation at Salapia, an ancient urban
center and port, will oer insights into
the inner workings of a Mediterranean
trading center, while work at San Vito,
a coastal villa on the southeastern side
of the lagoon, will oer a rural counter-
point to Salapia.
Cotsen Grants are made possible
through the generous support of
Lloyd E. Cotsen, former AIA Board
Member and chairman of the Cotsen
Foundation for the ART of TEACI-
ING and the Cotsen Foundation for
Academic Research. Two grants of
$25,000 each are available annually,
with one providing seed money to an
archaeologist organizing his or her rst
excavation, and the other assisting a
mid-career archaeologist moving for-
ward with an excavation in progress.
Te next deadline to apply for the Cot-
sen Excavation Grants is November 1,
2014. To read more about the Cotsen
Excavation Grant and other AIA
grants and fellowships, please visit
www.archaeological.org/grants.
(Left to right) Parkinson and Galaty, codirectors of the
project in Diros Bay, Greece; a view of the promontory that
will be the focus of the 2014 season in Diros Bay; Totten,
codirector of the Salapia Exploration Project
66
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A
IA L S, spread
across the United States, Can-
ada, and Europe, oer inter-
esting, informative, and innovative
archaeological programming to their
communities. Each year, through the
Societies eorts, thousands of people
have opportunities to experience
archaeology rsthand right in their
own backyards. Since 1997, the AIA
has supported the programs oered
by Local Societies through the Soci-
ety Outreach Grant Program. To
date the AIA has awarded almost
$120,000 to more than 80 programs.
Winners in the last round of grants
(fall 2013) were:
AIA Akron-Kent Local Society
for A Taste of Ancient Greece and
Rome: A symposium in the classi-
cal sense, the program included a
banquet, entertainment, and short
lectures. By hosting and publiciz-
ing events like these, the Society
maximizes its exposure to the wider
community in Akron, Kent, and
neighboring areas and promotes
membership in the AIA while pro-
viding participants with an enjoy-
able and entertaining educational
experience.
AIA Central Arizona Local Soci-
ety for Apples + Archaeology: Tis
innovative and dynamic public out-
reach program, now in its fth year,
was created to connect faculty mem-
bers from local colleges and uni-
versities with K12 educators and
students in the metropolitan Phoenix
area. Faculty members present lec-
tures and creative projects to diverse
groups of students across the Valley
of the Sun.
AIA Houston Local Society for
an Educational Residency on Texas
Archaeology: Te Local Society part-
nered with educators and archaeolo-
gists from the Shumla Archeological
Research & Education Center to pres-
ent a week of events focused on the
history of Paleolithic Texas at several
local elementary and middle schools.
AIA Milwaukee Local Society for
its Fifth Annual Milwaukee Archaeol-
ogy Fair: Te two-day fair included
two dozen presentations and displays
featuring archaeology and culture from
Wisconsin and around the world.
Programs included ancient games,
a name that myth challenge, and
opportunities to learn about ota-
tion, Inca mummies, and writing
systems. Also on hand in full regalia
were reenactors representing Roman
legionaries, Celtic warriors, Greek
hoplites, and Renaissance knights.
AIA Rochester Local Society for
Classroom Visit with Alex the Archae-
ologist: As a pre-visit supplement
to Passport to the Past, the most
popular school tour oered at the
Memorial Art Gallery, area teachers
could invite Alex the Archaeologist
to visit their classroom. Alex present-
ed an interactive, illustrated talk on
the basics of archaeology, conducted
a sample excavation, and provided an
object-based hands-on activity for
the students.
AIA Stanford Local Society for
Archaeology MemoryHeritage Pres-
ervation: In an eort to preserve the
history of archaeology, the program
invited archaeologists to answer a
set of questions and relate personal
experiences, anecdotes from the eld,
recollections of mentors and archae-
ologists from previous generations,
and advice for future generations.
AIA Staten Island Local Society
for Staten Island Archaeology Fair: A
joint eort between the Society and
Wagner College, the fair featured
informative, fun, and interactive pro-
grams presented by archaeologists,
historians, museum educators, and
interpreters from organizations in the
greater New York City area.
AIA Toronto Local Society for
Archaeology Student Publication Work-
shop: Students presenting papers at
the workshop had the opportunity to
practice their presentation skills, see
their work in a professional context,
and receive valuable critiques and
advice in a supportive setting that
promoted dialogue and interaction.
To learn more about these and other
Local Society programs and the grant
program, please visit archaeological.org/
societies.
Society Outreach Grant Winners
Each year AIA Local Societies offer a variety of pro-
grams including (top to bottom) an Archaeology Fair
in Houston, Ancient Toolmaking in Western Illinois,
A Day in the Field in Western Massachusetts, and
Classics Day in Lubbock.
call: 8007486262 web site: www.aiatours.org email: aia@studytours.org
IRAN GYPT JUNI SI A ] ORDAN SCOTL AND IREL AND
I TALY IRANCE SPAI N CROATI A CYPRUS GREECE
JURKEY MEXI CO GUATEMAL A CUBA IERU o MORE
Journey Down the Ganges:
Indias Holiest River
February 10 - 23, 2015
aboard an elegant riverboat
with 28 staterooms
ARTIFACT
68 ARCHAEOLOGY July/August 2014
T
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are often accompanied by dramatic changes in the way artists choose to
depict humans. One such moment occurred in the early Neolithic period. At
the site of Tell Qarassa, in what is now Syria, archaeologists have found an
extraordinary example of artistic expression created at the time when the regions inhabitants
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Archaeological Tours
led by noted scholars
Invites You to Journey Back in Time
Journey back in time with us. Weve been taking curious travelers on fascinating historical study tours for the
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