Early Modern Italian reception of MesoAmerica
ZOOM lecture by by Dr. David Domenici in the Department of History and Cultures at the Universita di Bologna.
ZOOM lecture by by Dr. David Domenici in the Department of History and Cultures at the Universita di Bologna.
Tree-ring dating burst into Southwestern archaeology on June 22, 1929, when Andrew Ellicott Douglass of the University of Arizona and his colleagues discovered specimen HH-39, the piece of charcoal that “bridged the gap” in his tree-ring chronology and allowed him to date, for the first time in history, archaeological sites at Mesa Verde, Chaco Canyon, […]
Speaker: Dr. Rachel Horowitz (WA State University) Title: Ancient Maya Economies: The Role of Small-Scale Craft Producers Abstract: Archaeological research on the Maya has a lengthy history. While much research has focused on Maya political organization, less is known about economic activities, as these were infrequently recorded by the Maya in their written text. This […]
Oliver Lecture Co-sponsored by the Department of Classics FSU
Kantor Lecture
Manton Lecture
Farming spread from its center of origin in western Asia to southern Europe at the beginning of the Holocene. This phenomenon has prompted many questions. Why did farming spread when it did? Who brought it to southern Europe, and by what means? Migrant farmers from western Asia reached the Aegean before 9,000 cal BP (c. […]
Metcalf Lecture Please join the lecture before 7:30
Kershaw Lecture
Join us for the next chapter of Archaeology Abridged with Dr. Elizabeth M. Greene. Dr. Greene will introduce you to the spectacular landscape of the Hadrian’s Wall corridor and then zoom in on the extraordinary site of Vindolanda in the central sector of this region. The Roman frontier in Britain is one of the most […]