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List of Australian archaeologists

Index List of Australian archaeologists

The following is a list of notable Australian archaeologists well-known individuals with a large body of published work or notable research. [1]

138 relations: Adam Ford, Alan Thorne, Alice Gorman, Ancient Near East, Anthropological Society of New South Wales, Anthropology, Antonio Sagona, Arthur Dale Trendall, Auckland, Australian Archaeological Association, Australian Archaeology (journal), Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Australian National University, Australian Research Council, Australopithecus africanus, Barry L. Frankhauser, Basil Hennessy, Betty Meehan, Biblical archaeology, Carmel Schrire, Claire Smith, Cloggs Cave, Contemporary archaeology, Cordyline australis, Corinella, Victoria, Cultural heritage management, Culture-historical archaeology, Cyprus, David Frankel (archaeologist), Diane Barwick, Dirk Spennemann, Don Ranson, Estelle Lazer, Eugene Stockton, Flinders University, Fred McCarthy (archaeologist), Frederic Slater, Gary Presland, Grafton Elliot Smith, Graham Connah, Harry Lourandos, Heather Burke, Hilary du Cros, Historical archaeology in Australia, History of archaeology, Homo floresiensis, Hungarian National Museum, Hyperdiffusionism in archaeology, Iain Davidson, Ian Jack, ..., Isabel McBryde, J. A. Thompson, Jack Golson, James Cook University, James Stewart (archaeologist), Jeannette Hope, Jim Allen (archaeologist), Johan Kamminga, John Clegg (archaeologist), John Mulvaney, Josephine Flood, Judy Birmingham, Keilor archaeological site, Koonalda Cave, Koongine Cave, Kow Swamp, Kutikina Cave, La Trobe University, Lake Mungo, Lapita culture, Leiden University, Les Bursill, London, Maningrida, Northern Territory, Margaret Clunies Ross, Marxist archaeology, Melbourne Museum, Mike Morwood, Monash University, Murujuga, Norman Tindale, Oceania, Order of Australia, Pella, Pella, Jordan, Peter Bellwood, Peter Coutts, Peter Hiscock, Peter Mathews (archaeologist), Pleistocene, Polynesians, Pompeii, Port Essington, Prehistoric Europe, Raymond Dart, Rhys Jones (archaeologist), Roger Cribb, Ron Vanderwal, Royal Canberra Hospital, Samoa, Sandor (Alexander) Gallus, Sandra Bowdler, Savai'i, School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences, Scott Cane, Skeleton, Space archaeology, Stephen Bourke, The Sydney Morning Herald, Tim Murray (archaeologist), Timothy Potts, UCL Institute of Archaeology, University College London, University of Adelaide, University of Auckland, University of Cambridge, University of Cape Town, University of Edinburgh, University of Gothenburg, University of Leicester, University of Melbourne, University of New England (Australia), University of New South Wales, University of Otago, University of Oxford, University of Paris, University of Queensland, University of Sydney, University of Western Australia, V. Gordon Childe, Val Attenbrow, Vancouver, Veronica Seton-Williams, Victoria Archaeological Survey, Vincent Megaw, Western Australian Museum, Who's Been Sleeping in My House?, William Culican. Expand index (88 more) »

Adam Ford

Adam Ford is a British-born archaeologist who has worked in United Kingdom, the Caribbean, the Middle East and Australia.

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Alan Thorne

Alan Gordon Thorne (1 March 1939 – 21 May 2012) was an Australian born academic who was extensively involved with various anthropological events and is considered an authority on interpretations of Aboriginal Australian origins and the human genome.

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Alice Gorman

Alice Gorman (born 1964) is an Australian archaeologist, heritage consultant, and lecturer, who is best known for pioneering work in the field of space archaeology and her Space Age Archaeology blog.

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Ancient Near East

The ancient Near East was the home of early civilizations within a region roughly corresponding to the modern Middle East: Mesopotamia (modern Iraq, southeast Turkey, southwest Iran, northeastern Syria and Kuwait), ancient Egypt, ancient Iran (Elam, Media, Parthia and Persia), Anatolia/Asia Minor and Armenian Highlands (Turkey's Eastern Anatolia Region, Armenia, northwestern Iran, southern Georgia, and western Azerbaijan), the Levant (modern Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, and Jordan), Cyprus and the Arabian Peninsula.

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Anthropological Society of New South Wales

The Anthropological Society of New South Wales was formed in 1928, by William Walford Thorpe, ethnologist of the Australian Museum, Clifton Cappie Towle and three others.

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Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and human behaviour and societies in the past and present.

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Antonio Sagona

Antonio (Tony) Giuseppe Sagona (1956-2017), was an archaeologist and classics professor who taught at the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia.

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Arthur Dale Trendall

Arthur Dale Trendall AC CMG (28 March 1909 – 13 November 1995) was a New Zealand-born Australian art historian and classical archaeologist whose work on identifying the work of individual artists on Greek ceramic vessels at Apulia and other sites earned him international prizes and a papal knighthood.

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Auckland

Auckland is a city in New Zealand's North Island.

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Australian Archaeological Association

The Australian Archaeological Association Inc. is an archaeological organisation in Australia.

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Australian Archaeology (journal)

Australian Archaeology is a biannual peer reviewed academic journal published by the Australian Archaeological Association.

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Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies

The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) is an independent Australian Government statutory authority.

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Australian National University

The Australian National University (ANU) is a national research university located in Canberra, the capital of Australia.

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Australian Research Council

The Australian Research Council (ARC) is one of the Australian government's two main agencies (with NHMRC) for competitively allocating research funding to academics and researchers at Australian universities.

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Australopithecus africanus

Australopithecus africanus is an extinct (fossil) species of the australopithecines, the first of an early ape-form species to be classified as hominin (in 1924).

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Barry L. Frankhauser

Barry L. Frankhauser is an archaeologist who has worked in Australia and New Zealand.

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Basil Hennessy

John Basil Hennessy AO (10 February 1925 – 27 October 2013), was an Australian archaeologist of the Ancient Near East and Emeritus Professor of Near Eastern Archaeology at the University of Sydney.

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Betty Meehan

Betty Francis Meehan (born 1933) is an Australian archaeologist and anthropologist who has worked extensively with Aboriginal tribes in Arnhem Land.

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Biblical archaeology

Biblical archaeology involves the recovery and scientific investigation of the material remains of past cultures that can illuminate the periods and descriptions in the Bible, be they from the Old Testament (Tanakh) or from the New Testament, as well as the history and cosmogony of the Judeo-Christian religions.

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Carmel Schrire

Carmel Schrire (born May 15, 1941) is a professor of anthropology at Rutgers University whose research focuses on historical archaeology, particularly in South Africa and Europe.

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Claire Smith

Claire Smith (born 15 July 1957) is an Australian archaeologist specialising in indigenous archaeology and rock art.

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Cloggs Cave

Cloggs Cave is a limestone cave and rockshelter with significant Aboriginal archaeological deposits, located on a cliff along the Snowy River gorge near the town of Buchan, Victoria.

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Contemporary archaeology

Contemporary Archaeology is a field of archaeological research that focuses on the most recent (20th and 21st century) past, and also increasingly explores the application of archaeological thinking to the contemporary world.

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Cordyline australis

Cordyline australis, commonly known as the cabbage tree, cabbage-palm or tī kōuka, is a widely branched monocot tree endemic to New Zealand.

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Corinella, Victoria

Corinella is a town in Victoria, Australia, located 114 km south-east of Melbourne via the M1 and the Bass Highway, on the eastern shore of Western Port.

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Cultural heritage management

Cultural heritage management (CHM) is the vocation and practice of managing cultural heritage.

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Culture-historical archaeology

Culture-historical archaeology is an archaeological theory that emphasises defining historical societies into distinct ethnic and cultural groupings according to their material culture.

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Cyprus

Cyprus (Κύπρος; Kıbrıs), officially the Republic of Cyprus (Κυπριακή Δημοκρατία; Kıbrıs Cumhuriyeti), is an island country in the Eastern Mediterranean and the third largest and third most populous island in the Mediterranean.

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David Frankel (archaeologist)

David Frankel is Emeritus Professor in Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of Archaeology and History at La Trobe University.

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Diane Barwick

Diane Elizabeth McEachern Barwick (29 April 1938 – 4 April 1986) was a Canadian-born anthropologist, historian, and Aboriginal-rights activist.

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Dirk Spennemann

Dr.

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Don Ranson

Don Ranson is an Australian archaeologist who played an important role in the discovery and recognition of the antiquity of Aboriginal archaeology in Tasmania.

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Estelle Lazer

Estelle Lazer is an independent archaeologist who has worked on sites in the Middle East, Italy, Cyprus, the UK, Antarctica and Australia.

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Eugene Stockton

Fr Eugene Stockton (born 1934) is a retired Catholic priest and archaeologist in the Blue Mountains region of New South Wales, Australia.

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Flinders University

Flinders University is a public university in Adelaide, South Australia.

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Fred McCarthy (archaeologist)

Frederick David "Fred" McCarthy (13 August 1905 – 18 November 1997) was an Australian anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Frederic Slater

Frederic Slater (c1880- 10 March 1947) was an Australian journalist, poet, researcher and "authority on aboriginal folk lore".

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Gary Presland

Gary Presland is an Australian archaeologist and writer who studied history at La Trobe University 1973-76, and archaeology at the University of London, 1977-79.

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Grafton Elliot Smith

Sir Grafton Elliot Smith, FRS FRCP (15 August 1871 – 1 January 1937) was an Australian-British anatomist, Egyptologist and a proponent of the hyperdiffusionist view of prehistory.

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Graham Connah

Graham Connah (born 11 August 1934) is a British-born archaeologist who has worked extensively in Britain, South Africa and Australia.

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Harry Lourandos

Harry Lourandos (born 1945) is an Australian archaeologist, Adjunct Professor in the Department of Anthropology, Archaeology and Sociology, School of Arts and Social Sciences at James Cook University, Cairns.

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Heather Burke

Heather Burke is an Australian historical archaeologist.

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Hilary du Cros

Dr.

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Historical archaeology in Australia

Historical archaeology in Australia is the study of Australia's past through material remains such as artifacts (objects), structures (standing and ruined buildings, fences and roads), features (ditches, mounds, canals and landfills), and landscapes modified by human activity in their spatial and stratigraphic contexts.

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History of archaeology

Archaeology is the study of human activity in the past, primarily through the recovery and analysis of the material culture and environmental data that they have left behind, which includes artifacts, architecture, biofacts (also known as eco-facts) and cultural landscapes (the archaeological record).

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Homo floresiensis

Homo floresiensis ("Flores Man"; nicknamed "hobbit") is an extinct species in the genus Homo.

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Hungarian National Museum

The Hungarian National Museum (Hungarian: Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum) was founded in 1802 and is the national museum for the history, art and archaeology of Hungary, including areas not within Hungary's modern borders such as Transylvania; it is not to be confused with the collection of international art of the Hungarian National Gallery.

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Hyperdiffusionism in archaeology

Hyperdiffusionism refers to hypotheses suggesting that certain historical technologies or ideas originated with a single people or civilization before their adoption by other cultures.

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Iain Davidson

Iain Davidson (born 14 January 1984) is a Scottish professional footballer, who is currently at Scottish Championship side Raith Rovers.

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Ian Jack

Ian Jack (born 7 February 1945)Who’s Who 2010, A&C Black, 2010 is a British journalist and writer who has edited the Independent on Sunday and the literary magazine Granta and now writes regularly for The Guardian.

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Isabel McBryde

Isabel McBryde (born 16 July 1934) AO is an Australian archaeologist and Professor Emerita, at the Australian National University (ANU) and School Fellow, in the School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts.

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J. A. Thompson

John Arthur Thompson (1913–2002) was an Australian Old Testament scholar and biblical archaeologist.

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Jack Golson

Jack Golson (born 1926, England) is an archaeologist who has done extensive field work in Melanesia, Polynesia and Micronesia.

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James Cook University

James Cook University (JCU) is a public university and is the second oldest university in Queensland, Australia.

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James Stewart (archaeologist)

James R. B. Stewart (3 July 1913 – 6 February 1962) was a noted Australian archaeologist of Cyprus and the Ancient Near East at the University of Sydney.

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Jeannette Hope

Jeannette Hope is an Australian archaeologist who has worked extensively in Western New South Wales.

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Jim Allen (archaeologist)

Jim Allen is an Australian archaeologist specialising in the archaeology of the South Pacific.

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Johan Kamminga

Johan (Jo) Kaminga is an archaeologist based in Canberra, Australia.

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John Clegg (archaeologist)

John Clegg (11 January 1935 – 1 March 2015) was an Australian archaeologist who specialised in the study of rock art in which he was one of the pioneers in Australia.

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John Mulvaney

Derek John Mulvaney (26 October 1925 – 21 September 2016) was an Australian archaeologist known as the "father of Australian archaeology".

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Josephine Flood

Josephine Flood, (born 1936) is an English-born Australian archaeologist, mountaineer, and author.

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Judy Birmingham

Jean Birmingham is a prominent English historical archaeologist, who has been based in Sydney, Australia, for most of her career.

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Keilor archaeological site

The Keilor archaeological site was among the first places to demonstrate the antiquity of Aboriginal occupation of Australia when a cranium, unearthed in 1940, was found to be nearly 15,000 years old.

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Koonalda Cave

Koonalda Cave is a cave located in the Australian state of South Australia on the Nullarbor Plain in the locality of Nullarbor.

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Koongine Cave

Koongine Cave is located on the Limestone Coast of South Australia.

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Kow Swamp

The Kow Swamp, a freshwater lake and wetland, was formerly a swamp, that is now used for water storage.

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Kutikina Cave

Kutikina Cave (or Kuti Kina of Fraser Cave) is a rock-shelter located on the Franklin River in the South West Wilderness World Heritage Area of the Australian state of Tasmania.

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La Trobe University

La Trobe University is an Australian, multi-campus, public research university with its flagship campus located in the Melbourne suburb of Bundoora.

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Lake Mungo

Lake Mungo is a dry lake located in south-eastern Australia, in the south-western portion of New South Wales.

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Lapita culture

The Lapita culture was a prehistoric Pacific Ocean people who flourished in the Pacific Islands from about 1600 BCE to about 500 BCE.

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Leiden University

Leiden University (abbreviated as LEI; Universiteit Leiden), founded in the city of Leiden, is the oldest university in the Netherlands.

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Les Bursill

Leslie William (Les) Bursill (OAM) is a Dharawal (Aboriginal Australian) historian, archaeologist, anthropologist, and publisher, born in Hurstville, New South Wales, on 4 February 1945.

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London

London is the capital and most populous city of England and the United Kingdom.

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Maningrida, Northern Territory

Maningrida is an indigenous community in the heart of the Arnhem Land region of Australia's Northern Territory.

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Margaret Clunies Ross

Margaret Beryl Clunies Ross (born 24 April 1942) is a medievalist who was until her retirement in 2009 the McCaughey Professor of English Language and Early English Literature and Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Sydney.

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Marxist archaeology

Marxist archaeology is an archaeological theory that interprets archaeological information within the framework of Marxism.

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Melbourne Museum

Melbourne Museum is a natural and cultural history museum located in the Carlton Gardens in Melbourne, Australia.

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Mike Morwood

Professor Michael John "Mike" Morwood (27 October 1950 – 23 July 2013) was a New Zealand archaeologist best known for discovering Homo floresiensis.

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Monash University

Monash University is a public research university based in Melbourne, Australia.

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Murujuga

Murujuga, usually known as the Burrup Peninsula, is an island in the Dampier Archipelago, in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, containing the town of Dampier.

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Norman Tindale

Norman Barnett Tindale AO (12 October 1900 – 19 November 1993) was an Australian anthropologist, archaeologist, entomologist and ethnologist.

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Oceania

Oceania is a geographic region comprising Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia and Australasia.

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Order of Australia

The Order of Australia is an order of chivalry established on 14 February 1975 by Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia, to recognise Australian citizens and other persons for achievement or meritorious service.

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Pella

Pella (Πέλλα, Pélla) is an ancient city located in Central Macedonia, Greece, best known as the historical capital of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon and birthplace of Alexander the Great.

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Pella, Jordan

Pella (Ancient Greek: Πέλλα, also known in Arabic as Tabaqat Fahl, طبقة فحل) is found in northwestern Jordan, 27.4 km (17 miles) south of the Sea of Galilee.

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Peter Bellwood

Peter Stafford Bellwood (born Leicester, England, 1943) is Emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the School of Archaeology and Anthropology of the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra.

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Peter Coutts

Peter John Frazer Coutts was an Australian archaeologist who was first director of the Victoria Archaeological Survey (VAS), the precursor to the Heritage Branch of Aboriginal Affairs Victoria.

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Peter Hiscock

Peter Dixon Hiscock (born 27 March 1957) is an Australian archaeologist.

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Peter Mathews (archaeologist)

Peter Mathews (born 12 June 1951 in Canberra, Australia) is an Australian archaeologist, epigrapher, and Mayanist.

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Pleistocene

The Pleistocene (often colloquially referred to as the Ice Age) is the geological epoch which lasted from about 2,588,000 to 11,700 years ago, spanning the world's most recent period of repeated glaciations.

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Polynesians

The Polynesians are a subset of Austronesians native to the islands of Polynesia that speak the Polynesian languages, a branch of the Oceanic subfamily of the Austronesian language family.

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Pompeii

Pompeii was an ancient Roman city near modern Naples in the Campania region of Italy, in the territory of the comune of Pompei.

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Port Essington

Port Essington is an inlet and historic site located on the Cobourg Peninsula in the Garig Gunak Barlu National Park in Australia's Northern Territory.

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Prehistoric Europe

Prehistoric Europe is the designation for the period of human presence in Europe before the start of recorded history, beginning in the Lower Paleolithic.

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Raymond Dart

Raymond Arthur Dart (4 February 1893 – 22 November 1988) was an Australian anatomist and anthropologist, best known for his involvement in the 1924 discovery of the first fossil ever found of Australopithecus africanus, an extinct hominin closely related to humans, at Taung in the North of South Africa in the province Northwest.

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Rhys Jones (archaeologist)

Rhys Maengwyn Jones (26 February 1941 – 19 September 2001) was a Welsh-Australian archeologist.

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Roger Cribb

Roger Llewellyn Dunmore Cribb (6 January 1948 – 24 August 2007) was an Australian archaeologist and anthropologist who specialised in documenting and modelling spatial patterns and social organisation of nomadic peoples.

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Ron Vanderwal

Ron Vanderwal (born 1938).

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Royal Canberra Hospital

Royal Canberra Hospital was the first hospital in Canberra, the capital of Australia.

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Samoa

Samoa, officially the Independent State of Samoa (Malo Saʻoloto Tutoʻatasi o Sāmoa; Sāmoa) and, until 4 July 1997, known as Western Samoa, is a unitary parliamentary democracy with eleven administrative divisions.

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Sandor (Alexander) Gallus

Sandor (Alexandor) Gallus (15 November 1907 – 29 December 1996) was a Melbourne archaeologist, most famous for his investigations of Pleistocene Aboriginal occupation at Koonalda Cave in South Australia and the Dry Creek archaeological site in Keilor, Australia, which helped demonstrate the great antiquity of Aboriginal occupation of Australia.

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Sandra Bowdler

Dr Sandra Bowdler (born 1946) is an Australian archaeologist, Foundation Professor of Archaeology and head of the Archaeology Department at the University of Western Australia.

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Savai'i

Savaii is the largest (area 1,694 km2) and highest (Mt Silisili at 1,858 m) island in Samoa and the Samoan Islands chain.

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School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences

The School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (École des hautes études en sciences sociales; also known as EHESS) is a French grande école (élite higher-education establishment that operates outside the regulatory framework of the public university system) specialised in the social sciences and often considered as the most prestigious institution for the social sciences in France.

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Scott Cane

Scott Cane is an Australian archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Skeleton

The skeleton is the body part that forms the supporting structure of an organism.

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Space archaeology

In archaeology, space archaeology is the research-based study of various human-made items found in space, their interpretation as clues to the adventures mankind has experienced in space, and their preservation as cultural heritage.

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Stephen Bourke

Stephen Bourke is an Australian archaeologist of the ancient Near East.

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The Sydney Morning Herald

The Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) is a daily compact newspaper published by Fairfax Media in Sydney, Australia.

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Tim Murray (archaeologist)

Timothy Andrew "Tim" Murray (born 12 February 1955) is an Australian archaeologist and Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia (2010).

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Timothy Potts

Dr.

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UCL Institute of Archaeology

The UCL Institute of Archaeology is an academic department of the Social & Historical Sciences Faculty of University College London (UCL), England which it joined in 1986.

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University College London

University College London (UCL) is a public research university in London, England, and a constituent college of the federal University of London.

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University of Adelaide

The University of Adelaide (informally Adelaide University) is a public university located in Adelaide, South Australia.

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University of Auckland

The University of Auckland (Te Whare Wānanga o Tāmaki Makaurau) is the largest university in New Zealand, located in the country's largest city, Auckland.

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University of Cambridge

The University of Cambridge (informally Cambridge University)The corporate title of the university is The Chancellor, Masters, and Scholars of the University of Cambridge.

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University of Cape Town

The University of Cape Town (UCT) is a public research university located in Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa.

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University of Edinburgh

The University of Edinburgh (abbreviated as Edin. in post-nominals), founded in 1582, is the sixth oldest university in the English-speaking world and one of Scotland's ancient universities.

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University of Gothenburg

The University of Gothenburg (Göteborgs universitet) is a university in Sweden's second largest city, Gothenburg.

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University of Leicester

The University of Leicester is a public research university based in Leicester, England.

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University of Melbourne

The University of Melbourne is a public research university located in Melbourne, Australia.

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University of New England (Australia)

The University of New England (UNE) is a public university in Australia with approximately 22,500 higher education students.

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University of New South Wales

The University of New South Wales (UNSW; branded as UNSW Sydney) is an Australian public research university located in the Sydney suburb of Kensington.

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University of Otago

The University of Otago (Te Whare Wānanga o Otāgo) is a collegiate university located in Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand.

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University of Oxford

The University of Oxford (formally The Chancellor Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford) is a collegiate research university located in Oxford, England.

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University of Paris

The University of Paris (Université de Paris), metonymically known as the Sorbonne (one of its buildings), was a university in Paris, France, from around 1150 to 1793, and from 1806 to 1970.

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University of Queensland

The University of Queensland (UQ) is a public research university primarily located in Queensland's capital city, Brisbane, Australia.

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University of Sydney

The University of Sydney (informally, USyd or USYD) is an Australian public research university in Sydney, Australia.

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University of Western Australia

The University of Western Australia (UWA) is a public research university in the Australian state of Western Australia.

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V. Gordon Childe

Vere Gordon Childe (14 April 1892 – 19 October 1957), better known as V. Gordon Childe, was an Australian archaeologist and philologist who specialized in the study of European prehistory.

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Val Attenbrow

Dr.

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Vancouver

Vancouver is a coastal seaport city in western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia.

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Veronica Seton-Williams

Veronica (Marjory) Seton-Williams (20 April 1910 – 29 May 1992), was a British-Australian Archaeologist who excavated in Egypt and the Near East.

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Victoria Archaeological Survey

The Victorian state government established the Archaeological and Aboriginal Relics Office under the Chief Secretary's Department, following the enactment of the Archaeological and Aboriginal Relics Preservation Act 1972.

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Vincent Megaw

John Vincent Stanley Megaw (born 1934), Springer Science+Business Media, pp 4769-4772, 2014,, Subscription required for full article is a British-born Australian archaeologist with research interests focusing on the archaeology and anthropology of art and musical instruments, Australasian prehistory and protohistory.

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Western Australian Museum

The Western Australian Museum is the state museum for Western Australia.

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Who's Been Sleeping in My House?

Who's Been Sleeping in My House? is an Australian factual television series aired on ABC1 on 21 November 2011, it is produced by joined up films, in association with the ABC and ScreenWest.

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William Culican

William "Bill" Culican (21 August 1928 – 24 March 1984) was an Australian archaeologist and lecturer in Biblical Archaeology and Pre-Classical Antiquity at the University of Melbourne.

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Redirects here:

Australian archaeologist.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Australian_archaeologists

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