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  • Virtual Symposium: Disability in the Ancient Greek World

    Virtual Event, hosted by Nashville Parthenon & AIA-Nashville Society TN, United States

    Join us for a free virtual talk on disability in the ancient Greek world by archaeologist Dr. Debby Sneed! Registration required, sign up here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_O8raQJkFQsWst1fkyuhxVg#/registration Dr. Sneed will preview a soon-to-be published article with new research on a female statue of a dwarf, found on the Acropolis. She will introduce us to the study of […]

  • Archaeology in a Bonsai Garden

    The Clark Bonsai Museum 114 W Audubon Dr CA, Fresno, CA, United States

    1. The guided tour of the Clark Bonsai Museum exhibits in a beautiful garden. Contained plants are an ancient tradition found in several cultures, related to medicinal, culinary, religious and artistic practices. Miniature trees, called bonsai, are related to Japanese, Chinese, and East Asian cultures. They are living artifacts and artworks, made to look ancient, […]

  • Rebecca Sue Lao

    The Water Works, Buffalo Bayou Park 105B Sabine Street, Houston, TX, United States

    International Archaeology Day, Archaeology Now (the Houston Society) will create a series of hands-on events about the Karankawa Indigenous Americans of the Gulf Coast that will be held in Houston on the banks of Buffalo Bayou, where this group of people lived, before Houston became a city.

  • Can You Dig It? 2025

    McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture 1327 Circle Park, Knoxville, TN, United States

    Event description Join us for a FREE family program at the McClung Museum celebrating International Archaeology Day. Can You Dig it? invites you to learn about the past and present with professional archaeologists from UT through engaging hands-on activities. Date: Sunday, October 19 Time: 12:00-4:00 p.m. **Tickets available starting October 4 via Eventbrite ** Families […]

  • Can You Dig It?

    McClung Museum 1327 Circle Park Drive, Knoxville, TN, United States

    Families with children of all ages are invited to a day of fun and hands-on learning at the McClung Museum. Dig deep into the past, learn from professional archaeologists, and explore a wide array of engaging activities like cave art painting, hunter-gatherer games, and so much more.

  • International Archaeology Day Family Event

    Cooper Gristmill 66 Route 24, Chester Township, NJ, United States

    Come drop by for a family-friendly event to learn about archaeology along the trails at the historic Cooper Gristmill. Hands-on activities include mapping and excavating chocolate chips from cookies, digging for and reconstructing pottery, name-writing in hieroglyphics, storytime, and more. This event is run by Girl Power Robotics, a Girl Scout robotics team, with the […]

  • Meanwhile…at Giza: The Central Field Cemetery in the Fifth Dynasty

    Virtual Event

    The American Research Center in Egypt, Northern California chapter, and the UC Berkeley Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures invite you to attend a Zoom lecture by Julia Puglisi, Harvard University: "Meanwhile…at Giza: The Central Field Cemetery in the Fifth Dynasty" Sunday, October 19, 2025, 3 PM PDT This virtual lecture will not be […]

  • Living in the Glen of Sorrow: an archaeology of life before and after the 1692 Massacre of Glencoe

    Online by Zoom , United Kingdom

    This talk will explore the archaeology of Glencoe, among Scotland's most famous and iconic glens, home to the MacDonald clan and setting for the Glencoe Massacre of 1692. Based on archaeological fieldwork by researchers from the National Trust for Scotland, University of Glasgow and Archaeology Scotland at settlement sites dating to the 17th and 18th […]

  • Living in the Glen of Sorrow: an archaeology of life before and after the 1692 Massacre of Glencoe

    Online by Zoom , United Kingdom

    This talk will explore the archaeology of Glencoe, among Scotland's most famous and iconic glens, home to the MacDonald clan and setting for the Glencoe Massacre of 1692. Based on archaeological fieldwork by researchers from the National Trust for Scotland, University of Glasgow and Archaeology Scotland at settlement sites dating to the 17th and 18th […]