Hala Sultan Tekke 1. Excavations 1897–1971. By P. Åström, D. M. Bailey and V. Karageorghis. (Studies in Mediterranean archaeology, 45:1). Göteborg: Åström. 1976. Pp. x + 135, 83 plates, 125 text figs, (incl. maps). Sw.kr. 190. - Hala Sultan Tekke 2. The Cape Kiti survey: an underwater archaeological survey. By T. O. Engvig and P. Åström. (Studies in Mediterranean archaeology, 45:2). Göteborg: Åström. 1975. Pp. 24, 49 text figs., 1 map. Sw.kr. 35.

1978 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 206-206
Author(s):  
Veronica Wilson

Integration and independence in the Mediterranean world - A.T. Grove & Oliver Rackham. The nature of Mediterranean Europe: an ecological history. 384 pages, 313 b&w & colour figures, 35 tables. 2001. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press; 0-300-084439 hardback £45. - Jon P. Mitchell. Ambivalent Europeans: ritual, memory and the public sphere in Malta, xvi+275 pages, 9 figures. 2002. London: Routledge; 0-41527153-3 paperback. - Greg Woolf. Becoming Roman: the origins of provincial civilization in Gaul, xviii+296 pages, 3 maps, 17 illustrations. 1998. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 0-521-41445-8 hardback £40 & US$64.95 - Andrew J. Shortland (ed.). The social context of technological change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650-1550 BC: proceedings of a conference held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 12–14 September 2000. x+273 pages, 55 figures, 13 tables. 42 colour photographs. 2001. Oxford: Oxbow; 1-84217-050-3 paperback £28 & US$45. - Eliezer D. Oren (ed.). The Sea Peoples and their world: a reassessment (University Museum Monograph 108, University Museum Symposium Series 11). xx+360 pages, 146 figures, 5 tables. 2000. Philadelphia (PA): University of Pennsylvania Museum; 0-924171-80-4 hardback $59. - Paul Åström Trial trenches at Dromolaxia-Vyzakia adjacent to Areas 6 and 8 (Hala Sullan Tekke 11; Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology XLV: 11). 68 pages, 77 b&w figures, 5 colour figures. 2001. Jonsered: Paul Äslröm; 91-7081-111-3 paperback Kr250. - A.T. Reyes. The stamp-seals of ancient Cyprus. xvii+286 pages, 545 figures. 2001. Oxford: Oxford University School of Archaeology; 0-947816-52-6 hardback £45 & US$65. - Katharina Giesen. Zyprische Fibeln: Typologie und Chronologie. 467 pages, figures, tables. 2001. Jonsorod: Paul Äström; 91-7081-171-7 paperback Kr350. - A.M. Snodgrass. The Dark Age of Greece: an archaeological survey of the eleventh to the eighth centuries BC (2nd edition), xxxiv+456 pages, 138 figures. 2000. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press; 0-7486-1404-4 hardback £57.50, 0-7486-1403-6 paperback £19.95. - Maria Eugenia Aubet. The Phoenicians and the West: politics, colonies and trade (2nd edition; tr. Mary Turton). xv+432 pages, 106 figures, 3 tables. 2001. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 0-52179161-8 hardback £47.50 & US$69.95, 0-521-79543-5 paperback £1 7.95 & US$24.95.

Antiquity ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (291) ◽  
pp. 241-246
Author(s):  
N. James

2012 ◽  
pp. 83-118
Author(s):  
Caroline Sturdy Colls

Public impression of the Holocaust is unquestionably centred on knowledge about, and the image of, Auschwitz-Birkenau – the gas chambers, the crematoria, the systematic and industrialized killing of victims. Conversely, knowledge of the former extermination camp at Treblinka, which stands in stark contrast in terms of the visible evidence that survives pertaining to it, is less embedded in general public consciousness. As this paper argues, the contrasting level of knowledge about Auschwitz- Birkenau and Treblinka is centred upon the belief that physical evidence of the camps only survives when it is visible and above-ground. The perception of Treblinka as having been “destroyed” by the Nazis, and the belief that the bodies of all of the victims were cremated without trace, has resulted in a lack of investigation aimed at answering questions about the extent and nature of the camp, and the locations of mass graves and cremation pits. This paper discusses the evidence that demonstrates that traces of the camp do survive. It outlines how archival research and non-invasive archaeological survey has been used to re-evaluate the physical evidence pertaining to Treblinka in a way that respects Jewish Halacha Law. As well as facilitating spatial and temporal analysis of the former extermination camp, this survey has also revealed information about the cultural memory.


2002 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Prangnell

<p>An archaeological survey on Peel Island in Moreton Bay, southeast Queensland, was conducted to assist the conservation planning for the Peel Island Lazaret (PIL), one of a number of institutions housed on the island during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The survey revealed a patterning of artefacts across the island as well as landscape modification related to its Aboriginal and European institutional uses.</p>


1990 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 231-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Bruce Hitchner ◽  
Simon Ellis ◽  
Alan Graham ◽  
David Mattingly ◽  
Lucinda Neuru

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