Archaeology Blogs |  | ArchaeoGeek Two sleeps till FOSS4G | |
FOSS4G in Barcelona is only a few days away now, and I’m getting very excited. The programme looks great! As an experiment (and due to Easyjet’s baggage policy) I’m going to try and manage with just my smartphone and my ipod- no laptop. This is a test post using posterous to see how feasible that [...] | | 03 Sep 2010 |
| Theoretical Structural Archaeology When on Google Earth 101 | After a frenetic period of When on Google Earth activity, taking us from Lee's WOGE 93 to the landmark WOGE 100 at the Moore Group in 8 days, welcome to an exciting new century of WOGE at TSA.
Having spotted the Gereza fort, Kilwa Ruins, Kilwa Kisiwani, Tanzania, this is my challenge; be the first to correctly identify the site below, and its major period of occupation, in the comments below, and you can host your own! Now with extra clue - see comments below!
The rules: Q: What is When on Google Earth? A: It’s a game for archaeologists, or anybody else willing to have a go! Q: How do you play it? A: Simple, you try to identify the site in the picture. Q: Who wins? A: The first person to correctly identify the site, including its major period of occupation, wins the game. Q: What does the winner get? A: The winner gets bragging rights and the chance to host the next When on Google Earth on his/her own blog! Be the first to correctly identify the site below and its major period of occupation in the comments below and you can host your own! More When On Google Earth For a list of previous winners see Electric Archaeologist here … or join the Facebook group here….
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| Past Horizons British archaeologists fight with Italian farmer to save ancient aqueduct | In January father and son team Edward and Michael O’Neill discovered the headwaters of the aqueduct, which was built by the Emperor Trajan, hidden beneath a crumbling 13th century church north of Rome. A sophisticated example of Roman hydraulic engineering, the aqueduct, known as the Aqua Traiana, was inaugurated in 109AD and carried fresh water [...] | | 06 Jun 2010 |
| BAJR Blog All change! | As you may have noticed, BAJR Blogging has remained unloved since December. This is because of the shiney new BAJR Federation site… http://www.bajrfed.co.uk get along there and enjoy… with news, galleries and forum to keep you up to date and informed. daily updates on jobs, conferences, events, news and views..! so whats stopping you?? See [...] | | 09 Feb 2010 |
| Online Archaeology Blog OPEN ARCHIVE - a new web based system for accessing our past | | The wealth of information gathered by local archaeological groups and societies on excavations, surveys and documentary research is one of the important sources of data for the study of archaeology in the UK. Currently, this archive of British archaeology is stored locally, within libraries and local history centres as well as with the originating group [...] | | 16 Sep 2009 |
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| Archaeology Blogs | This is an aggregated collection of entries from archaeology blogs. The list is comprised of blogs from: - Past Thinking - written by Tom Goskar, archaeological computing specialist
- Past Horizons - written by Maggie and David (BAJR)
- BAJR - written by David (BAJR)
- ArchaeoGeek - written by Jo Cook, Information Systems Coordinator, Oxford Archaeology
- Online Archaeology - written by Steve White
- Theoretical Structural Archaeology - written by Geoff Carter
If you want to nominate a blog to be included in this aggregated list please get in touch. |
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