Donate to the AIA

Support the AIA with a one-time gift or recurring donation!

For over 140 years, the AIA has worked to support archaeological research, fieldwork, preservation, and education. Your gift to the Annual Fund will help the Institute advance this mission and create a bright future for archaeology!

The AIA’s tax identification number is 13-5669180.


Prefer PayPal? Go to our PayPal donation page to process your gift.

If preferred, checks can be mailed to the following address:

Archaeological Institute of America

c/o Development Department

2000 Commonwealth Avenue, Suite 415

Auburndale, MA 02466

Please write ‘Annual Fund’ or ‘Uncovering Offer’ (if applicable) on the memo line.

Donor Exclusive: Uncovering

Explore the ancient world with our special Uncovering publication bundles. Each publication offers exclusive insights into groundbreaking archaeological research and excavations at some of the world’s most iconic sites.

As a thank you for your support, you can receive:

  • Any Uncovering publication — $35 minimum donation
  • Any two Uncovering publications — $55 minimum donation
  • Any three Uncovering publications — $75 minimum donation
  • The complete Uncovering series — $95 minimum donation

New Release: Uncovering Uluburun  

Next up in the AIA’s popular Uncovering series is the true tale of the discovery of the Bronze Age’s richest shipwreck. Travel to Uluburun, or the “Grand Cape,” on the coast of of Turkey and to the year 1320 b.c., when a vessel laden with 20 tons of cargo sank, including an extraordinary array of 18,000 objects from exotic locations across the Mediterranean and beyond. Uncovering Uluburun offers you an insider’s look at the merchants, mariners, and kings of the Bronze Age Mediterranean, the first great age of seafaring, commerce, and connectivity.

Uncovering Easter Island

On this remote Pacific island, beginning about 1,000 years ago, Indigenous people carved the enormous stone moai. Read about how these ingenious artists created and moved the immense statues, theories of what may have happened to the island’s ancient inhabitants, and how today’s Rapanui people are embracing these stunning monuments of their past.  

Uncovering Pylos

Like Troy, the ancient site of Pylos figures in the Trojan War as the home of the famous king Nestor, whose palace was discovered there nearly a century ago. Since then, archaeologists have worked to uncover extraordinary architecture and artifacts of the Mycenaean age, including the spectacular tomb of the Griffin Warrior, whose riches are revealed in these pages. 

Uncovering Troy

Troy is one of the best-known sites in the ancient world. During the Bronze Age, nearly 3,500 years ago, this was the location of the Trojan War, the epic battle chronicled by the ancient Greek poet Homer. This exciting volume provides an overview of Troy’s history and of the significant finds made by archaeologists who have worked there since it was discovered in 1871.