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  • The Problem of Distinguishing the Coronado Expedition’s Multiple Routes Across Southeastern Arizona

    Pecos Trail Café 2239 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM, United States

    (Lecturers: Richard and Shirley Flint). There has been recent reporting of the discovery of what appear to be traces of sixteenth-century European presence in extreme south-central and southeastern Arizona. As a result, assertions have been made that those traces are indications of an outpost of the Coronado Expedition, called Suya in the surviving documentary record […]

  • TBA (Mississippi/Memphis)

    TBA (Oxford MS/Memphis TN) , United States

    Charles Eliot Norton Memorial Lectureship

  • From Money to Metal: How to Operate a Civic Mint in the Roman Empire

    Joseph Merrick Jones Hall 108, Tulane University Freret Street, New Orleans, LA, United States

    Speaker: Dr. Kenneth W. Harl, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, Tulane University Based on analysis of the coins themselves, Professor Harl reconstructs how Greek cities in the Roman Empire manufactured […]

  • AIA Special Event: Eric Cline is coming to Emory! (March 19)

    Emory University, White Hall, Room 101 1672 North Decatur Road, Atlanta, GA, United States

    What: Dr. Eric Cline is coming to Emory! This lecture is NOT to be missed by archaeology enthusiasts or anyone with an interest in ancient Egypt. This is a special […]

  • Breaking Bronze for Demeter: Indigenous Religion and the Making of Greek Sicily

    Mount Holyoke College, Skinner Hall, Room 216 9 Blanchard Circle, South Hadley, MA, United States

    Dr. Alex Moskowitz – Breaking Bronze for Demeter: Indigenous Religion and the Making of Greek Sicily Tuesday, March 24, at 5:30pm Mount Holyoke College Skinner Hall, Room 216 Alex Moskowitz is a classical archaeologist and historian interested in rewriting conventional narratives of colonization in the Archaic Mediterranean through the lens of the experiences of communities […]

  • Beauty, Power, and Presence: The Neo- Assyrian Queens of Nimrud’s Northwest Palace, c. 865-705 BCE

    George Washington University, Funger Hall 108 (2201 G St NW Washington, DC 20052) Funger Hall, Room 108 (2201 G St. NW), Washington, DC, United States
    Hybrid Event

    DC Society Annual Louise Davison Lecture, delivered by Professor Amy Rebecca Gansell, St. John's University. Reception at 6:15 pm; DC Society Business Meeting at 6:45 pm; Lecture at 7:00 pm. Location and hybrid Zoom registration link TBA.

  • Homo sapiens Meets Neanderthals: The End of a World

    Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA, Cambridge, MA, United States

    Free Hybrid Lecture Wednesday, March 25, 6:00–7:00 pm Homo sapiens Meets Neanderthals: The End of a World Advance registration recommended for in-person and online attendance Speaker: Jean-Jacques Hublin, Professor at […]

  • AIA Archaeology Hour March 2026: Dating Australia’s Oldest Rock Art

    Take a virtual trip Down Under with the AIA as we catch up with Helen Green (University of Melbourne) as she presents the March edition of AIA Archaeology Hour: "Dating Australia’s Oldest Rock Art." This presentation will be given at 8pm Eastern/7pm Central/6pm Mountain/5pm Pacific. Register here.