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Archaeology

Index Archaeology

Archaeology, or archeology, is the study of humanactivity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. [1]

9106 relations: "Pimpernel" Smith, A Body in the Bath House, A Figa, A Month in the Country (film), A Scientific Support for Darwinism, A Short History of Pakistan, A Warning to the Curious, A'ali, A. J. Arkell, A. K. Narain, A. Ledyard Smith, A. M. Woodward, A. T. Hill, A.F.C. Sudbury, A92 road, Aammiq Wetland, Aarhus, Aarhus University, Aarhus University Press, Aasiaat, Aïn Tebernoc, Abbas Alizadeh, Abbasanta, Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi, Abd As-Salam Al-Asmar, Abdulrahman al-Ansary, Aberford Dykes, Abergavenny Museum, Abertay Historical Society, Abingdon (plantation), Abiward, Aboa Vetus & Ars Nova, Abraham Abell, Abraham de la Pryme, Abraham Geiger, Abraham Lissauer, Absolute dating, Abstraction, Abu Mena, Abusina, Academic writing, Academy of Albanological Studies, Academy of Sciences of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Acaray, Acámbaro, Accademia dei Lincei, Accelerator mass spectrometry, Aceramic, Ach (Blau), Acharei Mot, ..., Achill Island, Achille Allier, Acropolis Museum, Acta Archaeologica, Acta Archaeologica Sinica, Adalbert Ebner, Adam Giambrone, Adam Strange, Adana Archaeology Museum, Adder stone, Addington Long Barrow, Adela Breton, Adelaide Gaol, Adelbert Van de Walle, Adele Änggård, Adena Mansion, Adiele Afigbo, Adirondack Park, Adolf Ausfeld, Adolf Ernst, Adolf Furtwängler, Adolf Mahr, Adolf Rosenzweig, Adolf Schöll, Adolf Schulten, Adolfo Canyon Site, Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier, Adolph von Morlot, Adolphe Napoléon Didron, Adolphe Reinach, Adolphe-André Porée, Adrar Plateau, Adulis, Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, Aegean civilizations, Aegina Treasure, Aerial archaeology, Aerial survey, Afek, Israel, Affective science, Afghanistan, Afon Clun, African Archaeological Review, African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter, African Genesis, Africanis, Afrocentrism, Afton Down, Afyonkarahisar Archaeological Museum, Agatha Christie: An Autobiography, Age of Bronze (comics), Aghadoe, Agnes Baldwin Brett, Agropoli, Ahmad Hasan Dani, Ahmed Fakhry, Ahnenerbe, Ahouakro, Ahrensburg, Ahu Tahai, Ahu Vinapu, Ahwat, Aidone, Airborne Science Program, Airlift pump, Aitihya - The Heritage, Aix-en-Provence, Aix-Marseille University, Akademgorodok, Akaki Chanturia, Akşehir Museum, Akhisar, Akhisar Museum, Akhshtyrskaya Cave, Akkar plain foothills, Akra, Bannu, Aksaray Museum, Akumal, Al Ain National Museum, Al Da'asa, Al Markh, Al-Bad', Saudi Arabia, Al-Ma'abiyat, Al-Qubayba, Hebron, Alabama, Alaca Höyük, Alachua culture, Aladin (film), Alain Testart, Alaksandu, Alalakh, Alamitos Creek, Alamut Castle, Alan Blakeway, Alan Rowe (archaeologist), Alan Vince, Alana Cordy-Collins, Alanah Woody, Alanya, Alasdair Whittle, Alaska Territorial Guard, Albacete Provincial Museum, Albania (periodical), Albanifriedhof, Albany Fish Traps, Alberht of East Anglia, Albert Glock, Albert Goodyear, Albert Grünwedel, Albert Grenier (historian), Albert Herrmann, Albert I, Prince of Monaco, Albert Rehm, Albert Schwegler, Albert Spaulding, Albert Tissandier, Albert von Le Coq, Alberto Bachelet, Alberto Ruz Buenfil, Alberto Ruz Lhuillier, Albessen, Albi, Albright Institute of Archaeological Research, Alby, Öland, Alcide d'Orbigny, Alda Levi, Aldingen, Alekanovo inscription, Aleksandar Bošković, Aleksandar Stipčević, Aleksey Lidov, Alesia (city), Alessandra Nibbi, Aleut, Alex Bayliss, Alex Nyerges, Alexander Conze, Alexander H. Joffe, Alexander Henry Rhind, Alexander Kennedy, Alexander Marshack, Alexander Pechtold, Alexander Philadelpheus, Alexander Pol, Alexander Ruttkay, Alexander Selkirk, Alexander Stuart Murray, Alexander the Great in the Quran, Alexander Thom, Alexander Vallaury, Alexandra Jones (archaeologist), Alexandre Bertrand, Alexandre Du Mège, Alexandre Grandazzi, Alexandre Jacques François Bertrand, Alexandria, Alexandria Bucephalous, Alexandria on the Caucasus, Alexandrian school, Alexandru Odobescu, Alexandru Vulpe, Alexei Kondratiev, Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia, Alexey Okladnikov, Alexey Olenin, Alfonso Caso, Alfred Brueckner, Alfred Charles Auguste Foucher, Alfred Dieck, Alfred Duggan, Alfred E. Emerson, Alfred E. Johnson, Alfred Irving Hallowell, Alfred Körte, Alfred L. Kroeber, Alfred Louis Delattre, Alfred Maudslay, Alfred Rust, Alfred Schuler, Alfred Tozzer, Alfred V. Kidder, Alfred von Domaszewski, Alfred Watkins, Alfred Werner Maurer, Alfredo Chavero, Alfredo E. Evangelista, Alfredo Jahn, Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award, Algonquin people, Algoz, Alhaurín de la Torre, Ali Akbar Sarfaraz, Alice Beck Kehoe, Alice Gardner, Alice Leslie Walker, Alice Stevenson (archaeologist), Alicudi, Alien from L.A., Alignment (archaeology), Alireza Shapour Shahbazi, Alison Betts, Alison Doody, Alison S. Brooks, Alison Spedding, Alison Wylie, Alkali Ridge, All Saints' Church, Shuart, Alla Ter-Sarkisiants, Allahdino, Allard Pierson Museum, Allegra Stratton, Allendale County, South Carolina, Alliat, Alligator Effigy Mound, Ally Kennen, Alnwick Castle, Alojz Benac, Alone in the Dark (2005 film), Aloys Hirt, Alphons Stübel, Alta, Norway, Altagracia, Altars in Latin America, Altavista (disambiguation), Altenbamberg, Altenglan, Altenkirchen, Kusel, Alternative theories of the Hungarian language relations, Altheim, Austria, Alton, Illinois, Altona, New York, Altweidelbach, Alumni of the American University of Beirut, Alwin Schultz, Alwynne Cooper Wheeler, Amalek, Amanda Adams, Amar Singh (historian), Amarna, Amasra Museum, Amasya Museum, Amathus, Amazon rainforest, Amazon River, Amazonas Region, Amazons, Amda Seyon I, Amelia Island Museum of History, Amelia Peabody, America's Stonehenge, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American and British English spelling differences, American Anthropological Association, American anthropology, American Antiquity, American Council for Cultural Policy, American Digger (magazine), American Journal of Archaeology, American Quaternary Association, American River, American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, American Treasures, American University of Rome, American urban history, Americas, Americas (terminology), Amerind Foundation, Amersham Museum, Amiens, Amihai Mazar, Amino acid dating, Amir Drori, Ammonium chloride, Amorphism, Amy B. H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden, An Acceptable Time, An American Tail: The Treasure of Manhattan Island, An Outline of Modern Knowledge, Ana Lake, Ana María Groot, Ana Margarida Arruda, Ana Romero Masiá, Anabel Ford, Anabisetia, Anadenanthera peregrina, Anagarika Govinda, Anahulu River, Analysis, Anamur Museum, Ananda Temple, Anangula Island, Anant Sadashiv Altekar, Anarcho-primitivism, Anasazi Heritage Center, Anasazi State Park Museum, Anastasia Romanovna, Anastasio Cuschieri, Anastylosis, Anatole Jean-Baptiste Antoine de Barthélemy, Anatole Klyosov, Anatolian hypothesis, Anatolian Shepherd, Anatoly Belkin, Anatoly Derevyanko, Anatoly Khazanov, Anāl Naga, Anıtkabir, Ancalites, Ancestral Puebloans, Ancient Aliens, Ancient astronauts, Ancient Bath House of Nazareth, Ancient Beringian, Ancient Carthage, Ancient DNA, Ancient Egypt (magazine), Ancient Egyptian retainer sacrifices, Ancient footprints of Acahualinca, Ancient Greece, Ancient Greece and wine, Ancient history, Ancient history of Afghanistan, Ancient iron production, Ancient Israelite cuisine, Ancient Kymissala, Ancient Libya, Ancient Mesopotamian religion, Ancient monument, Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979, Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley, Ancient Near East Monographs, Ancient protein, Ancient Rome, Ancient Ruins and Archaeology, Ancient Society, Ancient trackway, Ancient Warfare (magazine), Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Andaman Islands, Andean civilizations, Andean preceramic, Anders Franzén, Andorra, André Boulanger, André de Resende, André Godard, André Jodin, André Laronde, André Leroi-Gourhan, André Parrot, André Piganiol, André Plassart, Andrés del Corral, Andrés Neumann, Andrea Carandini, Andrea De Jorio, Andrea Mantegna, Andreas Alföldi, Andreas G Orphanides, Andrew Birley, Andrew Garrard, Andrew M. T. Moore, Andrew Pettigrew, Andrew Reynolds (archaeologist), Andrew Sherratt, Andrew Tylecote, Andrew Wallace-Hadrill, Andries DuBois House, Andriy Valentinov, Andro Krstulović Opara, Anedjib, Anemospilia, Angel Mounds, Angel Phase, Angelina National Forest, Anglo-Saxon Amulets and Curing Stones, Anglo-Saxon art, Anglo-Saxon Deviant Burial Customs, Anglo-Saxon paganism, Anglo-Scandinavian, Angoulême, Aniconism in Christianity, Anil's Ghost, Animal, Vegetable, Mineral?, Ankershagen, Ankh-Morpork City Watch, Ann Arbor, Michigan, Ann B. Stahl, Anna Curtenius Roosevelt, Anna Marguerite McCann, Anna Maria Bisi, Anna O. 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Chase, Arm of Kannon, Armagh County Museum, Armenian wine, Armenians in India, Arminius, Armsheim, Army Museum of Toledo, Arne Koets, Arnold Brackman, Arnold Davidson, Arrested development, Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, Arsenical bronze, Arslan Eyce Private Amphora Museum, Art & Architecture Thesaurus, Art forgery, Artà, Artemiy Artsikhovsky, Artempo, Arthur Bernard Cook, Arthur C. Parker, Arthur Dale Trendall, Arthur Demarest, Arthur Dent, Arthur Evans, Arthur Frothingham, Arthur G. Miller, Arthur Giry, Arthur John Strutt, Arthur Komar, Arthur Mahler, Arthur Milchhöfer, Arthur Posnansky, Arthur Raistrick, Arthur Rosenberg, Arthur Segal (archaeologist), Arthur Stein (historian), Arthur Upham Pope, Artibus Asiae, Artifact (archaeology), Arts of Iran, Artsakh University, Arturo Issel, Arturo Montero, Arundel Museum, Arvidsjaur Municipality, Asbjørn Herteig, Aschbach, Rhineland-Palatinate, Asfur, Ashford Green Corridor, Ashgabat National Museum of History, Ashmolean Museum, Ashoka, Ashur Mosque, ASI (Archaeological Services Inc.), Asian Cultural Council, Asian Perspectives, Asine, Asociația Studenților în Arheologie, Asoke Kumar Bhattacharyya, ASPRO chronology, Asrlar Sadosi Festival of Traditional Culture, Assaad Seif, Assault of Darkness, Assemblage (archaeology), Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory, Association of Black Anthropologists, Association of Environmental Professionals, Association of Local Government Archaeological Officers, Association of North American Graduate Programs in the Conservation of Cultural Property, Astronomical year numbering, Astronomy, Asuka, Yamato, At Tiri, Atapuerca Mountains, Athanasius Kircher, Athelney, Athens, ATLA Religion Database, Atlantic Northeast, Atlantic roundhouse, Atlin Provincial Park and Recreation Area, Attica, Attila, Aubrey Burl, Audley's Castle, Audrey Meaney, Auen, Germany, August Eisenlohr, August Emil Braun, August Kalkmann, August Mau, August Reifferscheid, August Rossbach, Auguste Bergy, Auguste Brizeux, Auguste Le Prévost, Augusto Carlos Teixeira de Aragão, Augustus Le Plongeon, Augustus Pitt Rivers, Aukra, Aurel Stein, Austral University of Chile, Australasian Society for Historical Archaeology, Australian Academy of the Humanities, Australian archaeology, Australian Archaeology (journal), Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologists, Australian National University, Australopithecus, Authentication, Automated mineralogy, Auxiliary sciences of history, Avebury, Avellino eruption, Avenue (archaeology), Avenue (landscape), Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Avguštin Stegenšek, Avi Gopher, Avraham Biran, Axe-monies, Axel W. Persson, Axlor, Aydın Province, Aydin Balayev, Ayolas, Paraguay, Azar Gat, Azariah dei Rossi, Azilian, Aziz Ab'Sáber, Azra Erhat, Azrael's Tear, Aztalan State Park, Aztecs, Ángela Jeria, Árbæjarsafn, Åke Åkerström, Çanakkale Archaeological Museum, Çeşme Museum, Çukuriçi Höyük, Çumra, École Biblique, École du Louvre, École française d'Extrême-Orient, Édouard Ardaillon, Édouard Chavannes, Édouard de Barthélemy, Édouard Naville, Édouard Piette, Émil Goeldi, Émile Amélineau, Étienne Aymonier, Étienne Drioton, Évora, Ñawpa Pacha, Ödemiş Museum, Ötzi, Čapljina, Đevrske, Ġgantija, Ħaġar Qim, İçel Sanat Kulübü, İstanbul Archaeology Museums, İzmir Archaeological Museum, Łucja Okulicz-Kozaryn, Şanlıurfa Archaeology and Mosaic Museum, Şevket Aziz Kansu, Šilentabor, Żejtun Roman villa, Żnin, Življenje in tehnika, B&B Complex fires, B. B. Lal, B. Calvin Jones, B. H. St. John O'Neill, Ba (pharaoh), Baal with Thunderbolt, Baarlo, Baba Adam's Mosque, Babatha, Babesch, Babington family, Babken Arakelyan, Babruysk, Back Harbour, Bad Berleburg, Bad Camberg, Bad Driburg, Bad Hersfeld, Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, Bad Kreuznach, Bad Wilsnack, Badby, Baffin Island, Baffinland Iron Mine, Bagnall 0-4-0ST "Alfred" and "Judy", Bagsecg, Bahadır Alkım, Bahía Wulaia, Bahrain National Museum, Baikal Archaeology Project, Balangoda Man, Balbina Bäbler, Balkan Heritage Field School, Balkh Province, Ballista, Ballyragget, Ballyvaughan, Baltic University, Ban Chiang, Banana, Banc Ty'nddôl sun-disc, Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge, Banff National Park, Bangladesh, Bangui, Banjo enclosure, Bank Hall Gardens, Bankfield Museum, Banks Island, Banna (Birdoswald), Bannerstone, Banoti waterfall, Bantu expansion, Banwari Trace, Baptism, Bar jack, Bar-Ilan University, Baratti and Populonia Archeological Park, Barbara Ann Kipfer, Barbara Cleverly, Barbara Craig, Barbara Harrisson, Barbara Mor, Barbara Tsakirgis, Barber surgeon of Avebury, Barberêche, Barberino Val d'Elsa, Barbotine, Bardak Siah Palace, Bardo National Museum (Tunis), Barker-Cypress Archeological Site, Barkly West Museum, Barley, Barn, Barnes Creek (Wisconsin), Barnesville Petroglyph, Barnet Museum, Barnsdale, Barrel vault, Barri Jones, Barrow, Alaska, Barry Cunliffe, Barry Kemp (Egyptologist), Barry L. Frankhauser, Barry Raftery, Barry Zaid, Bars Media, Bartolomé Ruiz González, Baruch ben Neriah, Basil Brown, Basil Cottle, Basil Gray, Basil Hennessy, Basil of Baker Street, Basilica of Our Lady, Maastricht, Basin and Range National Monument, Basket weaving, Bassam Jamous, Basse-Terre Island, Batadombalena, Batey (game), Bath, Somerset, Battle of Alesia, Battle of Camulodunum, Battle of Mercredesburne, Battle of Mons Graupius, Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, Battlefield archaeology, Baufra, Bavarian State Archaeological Collection, Bavarian State Office for Monument Protection, Bawit, Bay of Wismar, Bà Chúa Xứ, Bâton de commandement, Béni Abbès, Börsborn, Beachcombing, Beagle Channel, Beaker (archaeology), Beale Poste, Beallsville, Maryland, Bearsted, Beatrice de Cardi, Beatrice Laura Goff, Beatrix Potter, Beatton River, Beaver Creek Fire, Beaver Lake point, Becca Peixotto, Becherbach (Bad Kreuznach), Becherbach bei Kirn, Beckedorf (Celle district), Bedesbach, Beehive, Beekeeping, Before Jerusalem Fell, Before Present, Before the Dawn (book), Behat, Beifudi, Beirut, Beirut Nights, Beit Mery, Bel Arvardan, Belfast Natural History Society, Belfast Naturalists' Field Club, Belgradkapı, Belice, Bellarmino Bagatti, Bellary, Bellovesus, Belo Horizonte, Beloit College, Belvedere auf dem Klausberg, Belvedere, California, Belzoni, Mississippi, Ben Cunnington (archaeologist), Ben Finney, Ben Lavin Nature Reserve, Bengal, Bengali renaissance, Bengalis, Benjamin Fillon, Benjamin Hawkins, Benjamin Smith Barton, Bensheim, Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site, Beothuk, Beret, Beric Morley, Berit Wallenberg, Berlin Foundry Cup, Bern, Bernadette Menu, Bernam River, Bernard Ashmole, Bernard de Montfaucon, Bernard Fagg, Bernard Goldman, Bernard O'Hara, Bernardo Arriaza, Bernhard Salin, Bernhard Schweitzer, Bernice Summerfield, Bernkastel-Kues, Berry (botany), Bert Hodge Hill, Bertha Parker Pallan, Bertha Phillpotts, Bethel College (Kansas), Bethlehem, New York, Bethoron, Bethune Blackwater Schooner, Bettencourt, Betty Hemings, Betty Meehan, Betty Meggers, Beuren, Cochem-Zell, Beyond the Witch Trials, Bhabananda Deka, Bhimber District, Bhimgarh Fort, Bi Skaarup, Biagio Pace, Biberstein, Bible, Bible and Orient Museum, Bible and Spade, Bible Lands Museum, Bible translations into Ilocano, Biblical Archaeological Institute, Biblical Archaeology Review, Biblical archaeology school, Biblical sandals, Biblical studies, Bibliography of anthropology, Biblioteca William Mulloy, Biddulph Grange, Bidzar, Biebern, Big and Little Petroglyph Canyons, Big Eddy Site, Big Heart West, Big History, Big Piney, Wyoming, Bigo, Bill Kuehne, Bill Leyden, Bill Nye the Science Guy, Bill Wyman, Billie Lee Turner II, Biloxi people, Bimbo Odukoya, Bint Jbeil, Bioclast, Biofact (archaeology), Biogradska Gora, Biologia Centrali-Americana, Biological anthropology, Bionic Six, Biosphere3D, Birbal Sahni, Birchington-on-Sea, Bird Hammock, Bird Homestead, Birger Nerman, Birgitta Hoffmann, Birgitta Wallace, Birka, Birkenfeld, Birmenstorf, Aargau, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Birutė Galdikas, Biscay, Bishop Road Site, Bishop Sutton, Biskupin, Bizzicu Rossu, Bjørnar Olsen, Blackburn, Blade (archaeology), Blaenavon, Blakeney Chapel, Blakeney Point, Blanche Wheeler Williams, Blank family, Blankenburg (Harz), Blas Taracena Aguirre, Bleiburg repatriations, Blevice, Blood, Blood residue, Bloomvale Historic District, Blue Beetle, Blue Guides, Bluestonehenge, Blyth, Northumberland, Blythburgh Priory, Blytt–Sernander system, Bo (parsha), Boasian anthropology, Bob Carr (archaeologist), Bob Clarke (historian), Bob Hudson (singer), Bocas del Toro Research Station, Bodiam Castle, Bodmin Moor, Body piercing, Bog body, Bog butter, Bog-wood, Bogdan Filov, Bogny-sur-Meuse, Bojacá, Bolivia, Boljoon, Bolko von Richthofen, Bolu Museum, Bone, Bone Detectives, Bone tool, Bones (TV series), Bonfire Shelter, Bonin petrel, Bonnet Carré Spillway, Book of Mormon Historic Publication Site, Boos, Bad Kreuznach, Boppard, Borbeck-Mitte, Bordesley Abbey, Boris Grakov, Boris Johnson, Boris Kuftin, Boris Marshak, Boris Piotrovsky, Borivali, Borneo, Borobudur ship, Boronów, Borra Caves, Borrering, Boscombe Bowmen, Bosnian pyramid claims, Boudica, Bourbourg, Bourne Park House, Bout-coupé, Bowdun Head, Bowl, Bowl barrow, Boxgrove, Boyd Wettlaufer, Bracelet, Bracken Hall Countryside Centre and Museum, Bracquemont, Brad Lidge, Bradford on Avon, Bradley hill fort, Bradshaw rock paintings, Brahmagiri archaeological site, Brain, Braith-Mali-Museum, Brampton, Norfolk, Branches of science, Brandberge, Branko Fučić, Brantwood, Brass, Bratislava, Brauweiler, Rhineland-Palatinate, Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History, Brean Down, Brežice Castle, Brechen, Breitenbach, Rhineland-Palatinate, Breitenheim, Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate, Breitscheid, Hesse, Brent E. 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Lambert, Wilhelm Alzinger, Wilhelm Bölsche, Wilhelm Dörpfeld, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher, Wilhelm Henzen, Wilhelm Holmqvist, Wilhelm Klein, Wilhelm Kubitschek, Wilhelm Reiss, Wilhelm Solheim, Wilhelm Spiegelberg, Wilhelm von Humboldt, Willard Libby, Willeke Wendrich, Willem Pleyte, William Allen Sturge, William Andrew McDonald, William Beaumont Army Medical Center, William Bent, William Blair Bruce, William Boyd Dawkins, William Collings Lukis, William Culican, William Curry Holden, William Duncan Strong, William E. Gates, William F Romain, William F. Albright, William Fairfax, William Fash, William Frederick Wakeman, William G. Dever, William Gell, William Gowland, William Greenwell, William H. Mounsey, William H. Prescott, William Hamilton (diplomat), William Hawley, William Hayes (American football), William Henry Boulton (author), William Henry Holmes, William Hunt and Sons, William Kelly Simpson, William Lamplough, William Ledyard Rodgers, William M. Bass, William Martin Beauchamp, William Mitchell Ramsay, William Mulloy, William Niven, William Pengelly, William R. Corliss, William R. Royal, William Rathje, William Reginald Halliday, William Robertson Coe II, William Saturno, William Scoresby Routledge, William Stukeley, William T. Sanders, William Talbot Aveline, William W. Fitzhugh, William Waddington, William Wilde, William Wilkins (architect), William Wyse Professor of Social Anthropology, Willie Wilde, Wilson, Arkansas, Wilton culture, Wiltshire, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, Wiltshire Museum, Winchester, Virginia, Windeby I, Windmill Hill culture, Windover Archeological Site, Wine in China, Wing, Buckinghamshire, Winifred Lamb, Winscombe, Winterville Site, Wirt H. Wills, Witham Friary, Witold Hensel, Wittmoor bog trackway, Wolfgang Ernst (media theorist), Wolfgang Gockel, Wolfgang Helbig, Wolfstein, Rhineland-Palatinate, Wolstenholme Towne, Women in ancient warfare, Women in brewing, Women in Egypt, Women in Maya society, Women in the Americas, Womrath, Wonder Girl, Wonderwerk Cave, Wonoboyo hoard, Woodblock printing, Woodcutts, Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club, Worcester city walls, Worcester Hunt Mosaic, World Archaeology, World Monuments Fund, World Trade Center site, WorldMap, Worthington George Smith, Wuffingas, Wuhan University, Wulf Herzogenrath, Wunü Mountain, Wuwei, Gansu, Wyandot people, Wyandotte Nation, Wye Marsh, X-ray fluorescence, X-ray microtomography, Xalîd Reşîd, Xamontarupt, Xanthos, Xavier Guichard, Xenoarchaeology, Xenobrood, Xia, Shang, Zhou Dynasties: from Myths to Historical Facts, Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project, Xinmi, Xothic legend cycle, Xunantunich, Xylotheque, Y Gaer, Ya'akov Meshorer, Yadanabon University, Yagan, Yager Museum of Art & Culture, Yaghan people, Yamato Province, Yannis Hamilakis, Yannis Sakellarakis, Yarımburgaz Cave, Yarmouk University, Yatterman (film), Yayoi period, Year, Yehuda D. Nevo, Yellowstone National Park, Yetholm-type shield, Yeungnam University, Yigael Yadin, Yik'in Chan K'awiil, Yizhar Hirschfeld, Yo'okop, Yo-Jin-Bo, Yohannes Haile-Selassie, York County, Virginia, York Museum Gardens, York River (Virginia), York River State Park, Yorkshire Archaeological and Historical Society, Yorkshire Museum, Yorkshire Philosophical Society, Yosef Garfinkel, Yoshihiro Senda, Yotam Tepper, Younes and Soraya Nazarian Library, University of Haifa, Youssef Hourany, Yozgat, Yozgat Museum, Yuan (surname), Yuan Zhongyi, Yuchi, Yukon, Yukon Beringia Interpretive Centre, Yup'ik, Yupana, Yupik, Yves Morvan, Zagreb, Zahi Hawass, Zahna, Zahrat adh-Dhraʻ 2, Zainab Bahrani, Zakaria Goneim, Zamora-Chinchipe Province, Zapote Bobal, Zarko, Zayandeh River Culture, Zóbel de Ayala family, Zbůch, Zbigniew Szafrański, Zdeněk Měřínský, Zdenko Vinski, Zdzisław Skrok, Ze'ev Herzog, Zebegény, Zelia Nuttall, Zemaryalai Tarzi, Zetten, Zettingen, Zheng Zhenxiang, Zhoukoudian, Zhuang studies, Zierscheibe, Zillertal, Zimbabwean art, Zimmerman Kame, Zinaida Reich, Zipora Cochavi-Rainey, Zliten mosaic, Zoë Strachan, Zofia Hilczer-Kurnatowska, Zooarchaeology, Zsófia Torma, Zwolle, ZX Spectrum, Zyndram's Hill, 1040s in art, 1100s in art, 11th century, 1340s, 1600s in archaeology, 1630s in archaeology, 1640s in archaeology, 1660s in archaeology, 1680s in archaeology, 1692 Jamaica earthquake, 1715 in science, 1720s in archaeology, 1730s in archaeology, 1732 in science, 1750s in archaeology, 1760s in archaeology, 1780s in archaeology, 1787 in science, 1790 in art, 1790s in archaeology, 1797 in science, 1798 in art, 1800 in France, 1806 in archaeology, 1807 in archaeology, 1808 in archaeology, 1809 in archaeology, 1810 in archaeology, 1812 in the United Kingdom, 1813 in archaeology, 1813 in France, 1814 in France, 1816 in art, 1820 in France, 1821 in France, 1822 in science, 1826 in archaeology, 1826 in France, 1827 in archaeology, 1828, 1828 in archaeology, 1828 in science, 1829 in archaeology, 1830 in archaeology, 1831 in archaeology, 1833 in archaeology, 1834 in archaeology, 1834 in science, 1835 in archaeology, 1836 in archaeology, 1837 in archaeology, 1838 in archaeology, 1839 in archaeology, 1839 in France, 1840 in archaeology, 1840s Carrollton Inn, 1841 in archaeology, 1842 in archaeology, 1843 in archaeology, 1844 in archaeology, 1845 in science, 1846 in archaeology, 1847 in archaeology, 1848 in archaeology, 1849 in archaeology, 1849 in France, 1850 in archaeology, 1851 in archaeology, 1851 in science, 1852 in archaeology, 1853 in archaeology, 1854 in archaeology, 1855 in archaeology, 1856 in archaeology, 1857 in archaeology, 1858 in archaeology, 1858 in India, 1859, 1859 in archaeology, 1860 in archaeology, 1861 in archaeology, 1862, 1862 in archaeology, 1862 in the United States, 1863 in archaeology, 1864 in archaeology, 1865 in archaeology, 1866 in archaeology, 1866 in art, 1867 in archaeology, 1872 in archaeology, 1872 in France, 1876 in archaeology, 1881 in archaeology, 1881 in France, 1882 in archaeology, 1882 in France, 1883 in archaeology, 1884 in archaeology, 1885 in archaeology, 1886 in archaeology, 1887 in archaeology, 1887 in France, 1888 in archaeology, 1889 in archaeology, 1889 in science, 1890 in archaeology, 1890 in science, 1891 in archaeology, 1892 in archaeology, 1893 in archaeology, 1894 in archaeology, 1895 in archaeology, 1896 in archaeology, 1897 in archaeology, 1899 in Germany, 1900 in archaeology, 1901 in archaeology, 1902 in archaeology, 1902 in France, 1902 in science, 1903 in archaeology, 1904 in archaeology, 1904 in France, 1905 in archaeology, 1905 in Wales, 1906 in archaeology, 1906 in aviation, 1906 in France, 1907 in archaeology, 1909 in archaeology, 1911 in archaeology, 1911 in France, 1912 in archaeology, 1913 in archaeology, 1914 in archaeology, 1915 in archaeology, 1915 in France, 1916 in archaeology, 1917 in archaeology, 1917 in France, 1918 in archaeology, 1919 in archaeology, 1919 in France, 1920 in archaeology, 1920 in Scotland, 1921 in archaeology, 1922 in archaeology, 1923 in archaeology, 1924 in archaeology, 1925 in archaeology, 1926 in archaeology, 1927 in archaeology, 1928 in archaeology, 1929 Barcelona International Exposition, 1929 in archaeology, 1931 in archaeology, 1932 in archaeology, 1933 in archaeology, 1934 in archaeology, 1935 in archaeology, 1936 in archaeology, 1937 in archaeology, 1937 in France, 1937 in India, 1938 in archaeology, 1939 in archaeology, 1940s, 1941 in archaeology, 1941 in science, 1942 in archaeology, 1943 in archaeology, 1944 in archaeology, 1945 in archaeology, 1946 in archaeology, 1948 in archaeology, 1949 in archaeology, 1951 in archaeology, 1952 in archaeology, 1953 in archaeology, 1954 in archaeology, 1955, 1955 in archaeology, 1955 in the United States, 1956 in archaeology, 1956 in Israel, 1957 in archaeology, 1958 in archaeology, 1959 in archaeology, 1961 in archaeology, 1962 in archaeology, 1963 in archaeology, 1964 in archaeology, 1965 in archaeology, 1965 in France, 1966 in archaeology, 1967 in archaeology, 1968 in archaeology, 1969 in archaeology, 1971 in archaeology, 1972 in archaeology, 1973 in archaeology, 1974 in archaeology, 1975 in archaeology, 1976 in archaeology, 1977 in archaeology, 1977 in France, 1978 in archaeology, 1979 in archaeology, 1981 in archaeology, 1981 in France, 1982 in archaeology, 1983 in archaeology, 1984 in archaeology, 1985 in archaeology, 1986 in archaeology, 1986 in France, 1987 in archaeology, 1988 in archaeology, 1988 in Wales, 1989 in archaeology, 1990 in archaeology, 1990 in the United Kingdom, 1991 in archaeology, 1992 in archaeology, 1993 in archaeology, 1994 in archaeology, 1995 in archaeology, 1996 in archaeology, 1997 in archaeology, 1998 in archaeology, 1999 in archaeology, 2000 in archaeology, 2000 in France, 2001 in archaeology, 2002 in India, 2003 in France, 2004 in archaeology, 2005 in Africa, 2005 in archaeology, 2005 in Iraq, 2005 New Year Honours, 2006 Birthday Honours, 2006 in France, 2006 New Year Honours, 2008 New Year Honours (New Zealand), 2009 in Iran, 2009 in Mexico, 2010 in Germany, 2011 in the United States, 2012 in archaeology, 2015 in aviation, 2016 in aviation, 375, 3rd Rock from the Sun (season 6), 6144 Kondojiro, 6th century BC, 7 Most Endangered Programme, 8th millennium BC, 99 Coffins. Expand index (9056 more) »

"Pimpernel" Smith

"Pimpernel" Smith (released in the United States as Mister V) is a 1941 British anti-Nazi thriller, produced and directed by its star Leslie Howard, which updates his role in the 1934 The Scarlet Pimpernel from Revolutionary France to pre-Second World War Europe.

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A Body in the Bath House

A Body in the Bath House is a 2001 historical mystery crime novel by Lindsey Davis and the 13th book of the Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries series.

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A Figa

A Figa is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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A Month in the Country (film)

A Month in the Country is a 1987 British film directed by Pat O'Connor.

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A Scientific Support for Darwinism

A Scientific Support for Darwinism (And For Public Schools Not To Teach "Intelligent Design" As Science) was a four-day, word-of-mouth petition of scientists in support of evolution.

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A Short History of Pakistan

A Short History of Pakistan is an edited book published by University of Karachi Press and comprises four volumes.

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A Warning to the Curious

"A Warning to the Curious" is a ghost story by M.R. James, found in his book A Warning to the Curious and Other Ghost Stories first published in 1925.

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A'ali

A'ali (عالي) is one of the biggest towns in Bahrain.

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A. J. Arkell

Anthony John Arkell (29 July 1898 – 26 February 1980), known as A. J. Arkell, was a British archaeologist and colonial administrator noted for his work in the Sudan and Egypt.

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A. K. Narain

Awadh Kishore Narain (A. K. Narain, 28 May 1925 – 10 July 2013) was an Indian historian, numismatist and archaeologist, who has published and lectured extensively on the subjects related to South and Central Asia.

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A. Ledyard Smith

A.

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A. M. Woodward

Arthur Maurice Woodward (29 June 1883 - 12 November 1973) was a British archaeologist and ancient historian who was director of the British School at Athens from 1923 to 1929.

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A. T. Hill

Asa Thomas Hill (November 29, 1871 – March 21, 1953), generally known as A. T. Hill, was an American businessman and archaeologist.

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A.F.C. Sudbury

A.F.C. Sudbury is a semi-professional football club based in Sudbury, Suffolk, England.

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A92 road

The A92 is a major road in Fife and Angus, Scotland.

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Aammiq Wetland

The Aammiq Wetland (the name is also sometimes transliterated as "Ammiq"or "Aamiq") is the largest remaining freshwater wetland in Lebanon, a remnant of much more extensive marshes and lakes that once existed in the Bekaa Valley.

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Aarhus

Aarhus (officially spelled Århus from 1948 until 31 December 2010) is the second-largest city in Denmark and the seat of Aarhus municipality.

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Aarhus University

Aarhus University (Aarhus Universitet, abbreviated AU) is a public research university located in Aarhus, Denmark.

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Aarhus University Press

Aarhus University Press (Danish: Aarhus Universitetsforlag) is a commercial Foundation, founded in 1985 by Aarhus University, Denmark.

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Aasiaat

Aasiaat or Ausiait, formerly Egedesminde, is a town in the Qeqertalik municipality in western Greenland, located in the heart of Aasiaat Archipelago at the southern end of Disko Bay.

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Aïn Tebernoc

Aïn Tebernoc is a former Catholic diocese and archaeological site in Tunisia.

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Abbas Alizadeh

. Abbas Alizadeh (born 1951) is an Iranologist and Persian archaeologist.

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Abbasanta

Abbasanta (literally "holy water"; Ad Medias) is a town and comune in the province of Oristano, Sardinia (Italy), and is located on the main road between Macomer and Oristano.

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Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi

Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi or Abdallatif al-Baghdadi (عبداللطيف البغدادي, 1162 in Baghdad–1231), short for Muwaffaq al-Din Muhammad Abd al-Latif ibn Yusuf al-Baghdadi (موفق الدين محمد عبد اللطيف بن يوسف البغدادي), was a physician, historian, Egyptologist and traveler, and one of the most voluminous writers of the Near East in his time.

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Abd As-Salam Al-Asmar

Sidi Abd As-Salam Al-Asmar (عبد السلام الأسمر, Al-Lasmar `Abd as-Salām) was a renowned religious Libyan Muslim saint who lived and died during the 15th century (1455–1575 CE).

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Abdulrahman al-Ansary

Abdulrahman al-Ansary (A.R. al-Ansary, Abdul-Rahman al-Ansary; عبدالرحمن بن محمد الطيب الأنصاري) is a former professor of archeology at King Saud University and member of the first and second terms of the Consultative Assembly of Saudi Arabia.

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Aberford Dykes

The Aberford Dykes are a series of archaeological monuments located around the valley of the Cock Beck, where it runs just north of the village of Aberford on the border between North and West Yorkshire, England.

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Abergavenny Museum

Abergavenny Museum is a museum situated in the grounds of Abergavenny Castle, Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, south east Wales.

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Abertay Historical Society

The Abertay Historical Society (AHS) is a historical society based in Dundee, Scotland.

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Abingdon (plantation)

Abingdon (also known as the Alexander-Custis Plantation) was an 18th- and 19th-century plantation that the prominent Alexander, Custis, Stuart, and Hunter families owned.

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Abiward

Abiward or Abi-ward, was an ancient Sassanid city in modern-day Turkmenistan.

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Aboa Vetus & Ars Nova

Aboa Vetus and Ars Nova is a museum in central Turku, Finland.

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Abraham Abell

Abraham Abell (April 11, 1789 – 1851) was an Irish antiquarian.

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Abraham de la Pryme

Abraham de la Pryme (15 January 1671 – 12 June 1704) was an English antiquary.

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Abraham Geiger

Abraham Geiger (24 May 181023 October 1874) was a German rabbi and scholar, considered the founding father of Reform Judaism.

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Abraham Lissauer

Abraham Lissauer (August 29, 1832 – September 29, 1908) was a German physician and archaeologist born in Berent, West Prussia (today- Kościerzyna, Poland).

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Absolute dating

Absolute dating is the process of determining an age on a specified chronology in archaeology and geology.

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Abstraction

Abstraction in its main sense is a conceptual process where general rules and concepts are derived from the usage and classification of specific examples, literal ("real" or "concrete") signifiers, first principles, or other methods.

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Abu Mena

Abu Mena (also spelled Abu Mina; ابو مينا) was a town, monastery complex and Christian pilgrimage centre in Late Antique Egypt, about southwest of Alexandria.

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Abusina

Abusina was a 3rd century Roman castra (military outpost) of the Roman Province of Germania.

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Academic writing

Academic writing is conducted in several sets of forms and genres, normally in an impersonal and dispassionate tone, targeted for a critical and informed audience, based on closely investigated knowledge, and intended to reinforce or challenge concepts or arguments.

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Academy of Albanological Studies

The Academy of Albanological Studies (Akademia e Studimeve Albanologjike) is the main institution of albanology in Albania.

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Academy of Sciences of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea

The Academy of Sciences of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (조선민주주의인민공화국 과학원) or State Academy of Sciences, formerly the National Academy of Sciences, is the national academy of sciences of North Korea.

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Acaray

For the hydroelectric power plant and HVDC-back-to-back facility in Paraguay, see Acaray Power Plant Acaray, also known as the Fortress of Acaray, is an archaeological site located in the Huaura River Valley on the near north coast of Peru (or the Norte Chico region).

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Acámbaro

Acámbaro is a city and municipality in the southeastern corner of the Mexican state of Guanajuato, on the banks of the Lerma River, and the oldest of the 46 municipalities of Guanajuato.

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Accademia dei Lincei

The Accademia dei Lincei (literally the "Academy of the Lynx-Eyed", but anglicised as the Lincean Academy) is an Italian science academy, located at the Palazzo Corsini on the Via della Lungara in Rome, Italy.

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Accelerator mass spectrometry

Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) is a form of mass spectrometry that accelerates ions to extraordinarily high kinetic energies before mass analysis.

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Aceramic

Aceramic is defined as "not producing pottery".

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Ach (Blau)

The Ach, also called Aach, is a river located in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

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Acharei Mot

Acharei Mot (also Aharei Mot, or Aharei Mos) (Hebrew for "after the death") is the 29th weekly Torah portion in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.

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Achill Island

Achill Island (Acaill, Oileán Acla) in County Mayo is the largest of the Irish isles, and is situated off the west coast of Ireland.

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Achille Allier

Achille Allier (Montluçon, — Bourbon-l'Archambault, 3 April 1836 (age 29) was a French writer, art critic and archaeologist.

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Acropolis Museum

The Acropolis Museum (Μουσείο Ακρόπολης, Mouseio Akropolis) is an archaeological museum focused on the findings of the archaeological site of the Acropolis of Athens.

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Acta Archaeologica

Acta Archaeologica is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering new discoveries of archaeological analysis.

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Acta Archaeologica Sinica

Acta Archaeologica Sinica, also known by its Chinese title Kaogu Xuebao, is a quarterly academic journal published by the Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

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Adalbert Ebner

Adalbert Ebner (December 16, 1861 – February 25, 1898) was a German Catholic priest and liturgist born in Straubing, in the Kingdom of Bavaria.

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Adam Giambrone

Adam Giambrone (born March 8, 1977) is a Canadian politician who was a Toronto City Councillor, representing the southern of two Davenport wards.

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Adam Strange

Adam Strange is a science fiction superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Adana Archaeology Museum

Adana Archaeology Museum, (Adana Arkeoloji Müzesi), located just west of the Sabancı Mosque in Adana, houses the historical heritage of Çukurova region.

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Adder stone

An adder stone is a type of stone, usually glassy, with a naturally occurring hole through it.

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Addington Long Barrow

Addington Long Barrow is a chambered long barrow located near to the village of Addington in the southeastern English county of Kent.

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Adela Breton

Adela Catherine Breton (31 December 1849 – June 1923) was an English archaeological artist and explorer.

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Adelaide Gaol

Adelaide Gaol was an Australian prison located in the Park Lands of Adelaide, in the state of South Australia.

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Adelbert Van de Walle

Adelbert Van de Walle was a Flemish-Belgian architect, art historian and professor in the History of Art and Archaeology at the University of Ghent (UGent).

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Adele Änggård

Adele Änggård (born Adele Hankey, 31 July 1933) is a British-Swedish stage and costume designer whose career has spanned some of the most significant major stages across Europe and Scandinavia.

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Adena Mansion

Adena Mansion was built for Thomas Worthington by Benjamin Latrobe, and was completed in 1807.

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Adiele Afigbo

Adiele Eberechukwu Afigbo (22 November 1937 – 9 March 2009) was a Nigerian historian known for the history and historiography of Africa, more particularly Igbo history and the history of Southeastern Nigeria.

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Adirondack Park

The Adirondack Park is a part of New York's Forest Preserve in northeastern New York, United States.

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Adolf Ausfeld

Adolf Ausfeld (30 August 1855, Gotha – 16 August 1904, Heidelberg) was a German schoolteacher and classical philologist, known for his studies of "Alexander romance", defined as a collection of legends involving the mythical exploits of Alexander the Great.

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Adolf Ernst

Adolf Ernst (Primkenau, Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia, (today Przemków, Poland) October 6, 1832 - Caracas, Venezuela, August 12, 1899) was a Prussian-born scientist.

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Adolf Furtwängler

Adolf Furtwängler (30 June 1853 – 10 October 1907) was a German archaeologist, teacher, art historian and museum director.

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Adolf Mahr

Adolf Mahr (7 May 1887 - 27 May 1951) was the best-known Nazi in Ireland in the 1930s and one of the most controversial figures in twentieth-century Irish history.

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Adolf Rosenzweig

Rabbi Dr.

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Adolf Schöll

Gustav Adolf Schöll (2 September 1805 in Brünn – 26 May 1882 in Jena) was a German art historian, archaeologist and classical philologist.

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Adolf Schulten

Adolf Schulten (27 May 1870 – 19 March 1960) was a German historian and archaeologist.

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Adolfo Canyon Site

The Adolfo Canyon Site (LA 5665) is an archaeological site containing a Navajo pueblito located in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, United States.

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Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier

Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier (August 6, 1840March 18, 1914) was a Swiss-born American archaeologist who particularly explored the indigenous cultures of the American Southwest, Mexico and South America.

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Adolph von Morlot

Adolph von Morlot (also: Charles Adolph de Morlot; see Note 1) (5 April 1820 – 10 February 1867) was a scientist who specialized in geology and later in archaeology.

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Adolphe Napoléon Didron

Adolphe Napoléon Didron (1806–1867) was a French art historian and archaeologist.

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Adolphe Reinach

Adolphe Joseph Reinach (12 January 1887 – 30 August 1914) was a French archaeologist and Egyptologist who participated in excavations in Greece and Egypt and published works on the Gauls.

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Adolphe-André Porée

Adolphe-André Porée, known as Chanoine Porée (14 March 1848, Bernay – 28 February 1939, Saint-Aubin-d'Écrosville), was a French archaeologist and historian.

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Adrar Plateau

The Adrar (Berber:, lit. mountain) is a highland natural and historical region of the Sahara Desert in northern Mauritania.

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Adulis

Adulis or Aduli (Αδουλίς in Ancient Greek) is an archeological site in the Northern Red Sea of Eritrea, situated about 30 miles south of Massawa in the Gulf of Zula.

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Advisory Council on Historic Preservation

The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP) is an independent agency of the United States government that promotes the preservation, enhancement, and productive use of the nation's historic resources, and advises the President and Congress on national historic preservation policy.

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Aegean civilizations

Aegean civilization is a general term for the Bronze Age civilizations of Greece around the Aegean Sea.

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Aegina Treasure

The Aegina Treasure or Aigina Treasure is an important Minoan gold hoard found on the island of Aegina, Greece.

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Aerial archaeology

Aerial archaeology is the study of archaeological remains by examining them from altitude.

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Aerial survey

Aerial survey is a method of collecting geomatics or other imagery by using airplanes, helicopters, UAVs, balloons or other aerial methods.

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Afek, Israel

Afek (אֲפֵק) is a kibbutz in northern Israel.

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Affective science

Affective science is the scientific study of emotion or affect.

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Afghanistan

Afghanistan (Pashto/Dari:, Pashto: Afġānistān, Dari: Afġānestān), officially the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, is a landlocked country located within South Asia and Central Asia.

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Afon Clun

The Afon Clun (River Clun) is a long tributary of the River Ely (Afon Elai), in the counties of Cardiff and Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales.

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African Archaeological Review

The African Archaeological Review is a peer-reviewed journal focusing on current African archaeology.

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African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter

The African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter is a quarterly scholarly newsletter that covers the subject of the African diaspora as well as related archaeological and historical studies.

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African Genesis

African Genesis: A Personal Investigation into the Animal Origins and Nature of Man, usually referred to as African Genesis, is a 1961 nonfiction work by Robert Ardrey.

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Africanis

The Africanis is a landrace of Southern African dogs.

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Afrocentrism

Afrocentrism (also Afrocentricity) is an approach to the study of world history that focuses on the history of people of recent African descent.

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Afton Down

Afton Down is a chalk down near the village of Freshwater on the Isle of Wight.

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Afyonkarahisar Archaeological Museum

The Afyonkarahisar Archaeological Museum (Afyonkarahisar Arkeoloji Müzesi), also known as the Afyon Museum, is an archaeological museum in Afyonkarahisar, Turkey.

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Agatha Christie: An Autobiography

An Autobiography is the title of the recollections of crime writer Agatha Christie published posthumously by Collins in the UK and by Dodd, Mead & Company in the US in November 1977, almost two years after the writer's death in January 1976.

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Age of Bronze (comics)

Age of Bronze is an American comics series by writer/artist Eric Shanower retelling the legend of the Trojan War.

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Aghadoe

Aghadoe (Irish: Achadh an Da Eo) is a large townland overlooking the town and lakes of Killarney in Ireland.

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Agnes Baldwin Brett

Agnes Baldwin Brett (née Baldwin 1876 – 1955) was an American numismatist and archaeologist who worked as the Curator at the American Numismatic Society from 1910 to 1913.

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Agropoli

Agropoli (Cilentan: Aruòpole or Aruòpëlë) is a town and comune, former bishopric and present Latin Catholic titular see located in the Cilento area of the province of Salerno, Campania, Italy.

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Ahmad Hasan Dani

Ahmad Hasan Dani (Urdu: احمد حسن دانی) FRAS, SI, HI (20 June 1920 – 26 January 2009), was a Pakistani intellectual, archaeologist, historian, and linguist.

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Ahmed Fakhry

Ahmad Fakhry (أحمد فخري) (1905 – 1973) was an Egyptian archaeologist who worked in the Western desert of Egypt (including in 1940 dig at El Haiz, and then at Siwa), and also in the necropolis at Dahshur.

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Ahnenerbe

The Ahnenerbe (ancestral heritage) was a think tank that operated in Nazi Germany between 1935 and 1945.

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Ahouakro

The archaeological park of Ahouakro is located in northern Tiassalé Department, Côte d'Ivoire.

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Ahrensburg

Ahrensburg is a town in the district of Stormarn, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.

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Ahu Tahai

The Tahai Ceremonial Complex is an archaeological site on Rapa Nui (Easter Island) in Chilean Polynesia.

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Ahu Vinapu

Ahu Vinapu is an archaeological site on Rapa Nui (Easter Island) in Eastern Polynesia.

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Ahwat

El-Ahwat is an archaeological site in the Manasseh region of Israel, located 10 miles east of Caesarea in northwestern Samaria near Katzir.

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Aidone

Aidone (Gallo-Italic of Sicily: Aidungh or Dadungh; Aiduni) is a town and comune in the province of Enna, in region of Sicily in southern Italy.

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Airborne Science Program

NASA's Airborne Science Program is administered from the NASA Neil A. Armstrong Flight Research Center, in Edwards, California.

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Airlift pump

An airlift pump is a pump that has low suction and moderate discharge of liquid and entrained solids.

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Aitihya - The Heritage

Aitihya- The Heritage; is a multi-lingual (English, Bengali and Assamese) research journal covering issues on Indology.

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Aix-en-Provence

Aix-en-Provence (Provençal Occitan: Ais de Provença in classical norm, or Ais de Prouvènço in Mistralian norm,, Aquae Sextiae), or simply Aix (medieval Occitan Aics), is a city-commune in the south of France, about north of Marseille.

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Aix-Marseille University

Aix-Marseille University (AMU; Aix-Marseille Université; formally incorporated as Université d'Aix-Marseille) is a public research university located in Provence, southern France.

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Akademgorodok

Coordinates: Akademgorodok (p, "Academic Town" or "Academic City") is a part of the Sovetsky District of the city of Novosibirsk, Russia, located 30 km south of the city center and about 10 km west of the Science town Koltsovo.

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Akaki Chanturia

Akaki Chanturia (აკაკი ჭანტურია, 1881 – 11 May 1949) was a Georgian scientist, archaeologist and ethnographer.

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Akşehir Museum

Akşehir Museum, a.k.a. Nasrettin Hoca Archaeology and Ethnography Museum (Nasrettin Hoca Arkeoloji ve Etnoğrafya Müzesi), is a national museum in Akşehir district of Konya Province, central Turkey, exhibiting archaeological artifacts and ethnographic items.

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Akhisar

Akhisar (pronounced: ah-kee-sahr, or more formally, ahk-hee-sahr, اقحصار) is a county district and its town center in Manisa Province in the Aegean region of Western Turkey.

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Akhisar Museum

Akhisar Museum is a museum in Turkey Akhisar is a populous ilçe (district) in Manisa Province.

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Akhshtyrskaya Cave

The Akhshtyrskaya cave (Big Kazachebrodskaya) is a notable archeological site in the Western Caucasus.

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Akkar plain foothills

The Akkar plain foothills are the location of several surface archaeological sites found between Halba and Adbe in Akkar Governorate, Lebanon.

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Akra, Bannu

Akra (آکرہ) is an archaeological site in Bannu, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.

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Aksaray Museum

Aksaray Museum is a museum in Aksaray, Turkey The museum is on the state highway connecting Aksaray to South Turkey at.

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Akumal

Akumal is a small beach-front tourist resort community in Mexico, south of Cancún, between the towns of Playa del Carmen and Tulum.

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Al Ain National Museum

Al Ain National Museum (Maṫ-ḥaf Al-‘Ayn al-Waṭanī), also known as Al Ain Museum (Maṫ-ḥaf al-‘Ayn) is a national museum in the city of Al Ain, within the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.

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Al Da'asa

Al Da'asa is an archaeological site located on the western coast of Qatar.

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Al Markh

Al Markh (المرخ) is one of the oldest and smallest villages of Bahrain.

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Al-Bad', Saudi Arabia

Al-Bad', Saudi Arabia is a town in Tabuk provence of Saudi Arabia.

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Al-Ma'abiyat

Al Ma'abiyat is a large archeological site in Wadi al-'Ula, Saudi Arabia.

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Al-Qubayba, Hebron

al-Qubayba (القبيبة), also known as Qubeiba, was a Palestinian village, located 24 kilometers northwest of Hebron.

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Alabama

Alabama is a state in the southeastern region of the United States.

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Alaca Höyük

Alacahöyük or Alaca Höyük (sometimes also spelled as Alacahüyük, Aladja-Hoyuk, Euyuk, or Evuk) is the site of a Neolithic and Hittite settlement and is an important archaeological site.

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Alachua culture

The Alachua culture is defined as a Late Woodland Southeast period archaeological culture in north-central Florida, dating from around 600 to 1700.

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Aladin (film)

Aladin is a 2009 Indian Hindi fantasy adventure film directed by Sujoy Ghosh, and featuring, Jacqueline Fernandez, Ritesh Deshmukh, Amitabh Bachchan and Sanjay Dutt.

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Alain Testart

Alain Testart (Paris, 30 December 1945 – 2 September 2013) was a French social anthropologist, emeritus research director at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris and member of the Laboratory for Social Anthropology at the Collège de France.

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Alaksandu

Alaksandu or Alaksandus was a king of Wilusa who sealed a treaty with Hittite king Muwatalli II ca.

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Alalakh

Alalakh (Hittite: Alalaḫ) was an ancient city-state, a late Bronze Age capital in the Amuq River valley of Turkey's Hatay Province.

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Alamitos Creek

Alamitos Creek or Los Alamitos Creek is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Alamut Castle

Alamut (الموت, meaning "eagle's nest") was a mountain fortress located in Alamut region in the South Caspian province of Daylam near the Rudbar region in Persia, approximately 100 km (60 mi) from present-day Tehran.

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Alan Blakeway

Alan Albert Antisdel Blakeway (1898 - 9 October 1936) was a British archaeologist who was director of the British School at Athens.

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Alan Rowe (archaeologist)

Alan Jenvey Rowe (29 October 1891 – 3 January 1968) was a British archaeologist most famous for his studies on ancient Egypt.

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Alan Vince

Dr.

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Alana Cordy-Collins

Alana Kathleen Cordy-Collins (5 June 1944 – 16 August 2015) was Professor of Anthropology at the University of San Diego.

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Alanah Woody

Alanah Woody (March 24, 1956 – July 19, 2007) was an American archeologist, anthropologist, professor and executive director of the Nevada Rock Art Foundation.

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Alanya

Alanya, formerly Alaiye, is a beach resort city and a component district of Antalya Province on the southern coast of Turkey, in the country's Mediterranean Region, east of the city of Antalya.

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Alasdair Whittle

Alasdair W. R. Whittle FLSW FBA is Distinguished Research Professor in Archaeology at Cardiff University, specialising in the Neolithic period.

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Alaska Territorial Guard

The Alaska Territorial Guard (ATG), more commonly the ES also known as the Eskimo Scouts, was a military reserve force component of the US Army, organized in 1942 in response to attacks on United States soil in Hawaii and occupation of parts of Alaska by Japan during World War II.

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Albacete Provincial Museum

The Albacete Provincial Museum (Museo Provincial de Albacete) is a museum of archeology and fine art located in Albacete, Spain.

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Albania (periodical)

Albania was an Albanian periodical published by Faik Konitza, one of the most important figures of Albanian culture in the early decades of the twentieth century.

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Albanifriedhof

Albanifriedhof is a cemetery in Göttingen, Germany just outside the city wall to the southeast.

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Albany Fish Traps

The Albany Fish Traps, also known as the Oyster Harbour Fish Traps, are a series of fish traps situated in Oyster Harbour near the mouth of the Kalgan River approximately east of Albany in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.

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Alberht of East Anglia

Alberht (also Ethælbert, Albert or Æthelberht I; ruled from 749) was an eighth century king of East Anglia.

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Albert Glock

Albert E. Glock (September 14, 1925 – January 19, 1992) was an American archaeologist working in Palestine, where he was murdered.

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Albert Goodyear

Albert C. Goodyear III is an archaeologist who is founder and director of the Allendale PaleoIndian Expedition in South Carolina, where he has unearthed controversial evidence that may greatly move back the date of occupation of North America by humans to 50,000 years or more before the present.

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Albert Grünwedel

Albert Grünwedel (July 31, 1856 – October 28, 1935) was a German indologist, tibetologist, archaeologist, and explorer of Central Asia.

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Albert Grenier (historian)

Albert Grenier (22 April 1878, Paris – 23 June 1961, Paris) was a French historian, theologian, and archaeologist.

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Albert Herrmann

Albert Herrmann (20 January 1886 – 19 April 1945) was a German archaeologist and geographer.

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Albert I, Prince of Monaco

Albert I (13 November 1848 – 26 June 1922) was Prince of Monaco and Duke of Valentinois from 10 September 1889 until his death.

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Albert Rehm

Albert Rehm (August 15, 1871 (in Augsburg)- July 31, 1949 (in Munich)) was a German philologist best known for his work on the Antikythera mechanism - he was the first to propose that it was an astronomical calculator.

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Albert Schwegler

Albert Schwegler (10 February 18195 January 1857) was a German philosopher and Protestant theologian.

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Albert Spaulding

Albert Clanton Spaulding (August 13, 1914 – May 29, 1990) was an American anthropologist and processual archaeologist who encouraged the application of quantitative statistics in archaeological research and the legitimacy of anthropology as a science.

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Albert Tissandier

Albert Tissandier (1839 – 5 September 1906) was a French architect, aviator, illustrator, editor and archaeologist.

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Albert von Le Coq

Albert von Le Coq (8 September 1860 – 21 April 1930) was a German brewery owner and wine merchant, who at the age of 40 began to study archaeology.

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Alberto Bachelet

Alberto Arturo Miguel Bachelet Martínez (27 April 1923 – 13 March 1974) was a Brigadier General of the Chilean Air Force.

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Alberto Ruz Buenfil

Alberto Ruz Buenfil (born 1945) is a native of Mexico whose work is dedicated to social change, environmental sustainability, and the performing arts.

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Alberto Ruz Lhuillier

Alberto Ruz Lhuillier (27 January 1906 – 25 August 1979) was a Mexican archaeologist.

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Albessen

Albessen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Albi

Albi (Albi) is a commune in southern France.

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Albright Institute of Archaeological Research

The W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research (AIAR), is an archaeological research institution located in East Jerusalem.

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Alby, Öland

Alby is a village on the Baltic Sea in the Hulterstad district at the western fringe of the Stora Alvaret.

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Alcide d'Orbigny

Alcide Charles Victor Marie Dessalines d'Orbigny (6 September 1802 – 30 June 1857) was a French naturalist who made major contributions in many areas, including zoology (including malacology), palaeontology, geology, archaeology and anthropology.

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Alda Levi

Alda Levi Spinazzola (Bologna, 16 June 1890 – Rome, 23 June 1950) was an Italian archaeologist and art historian.

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Aldingen

Aldingen is a municipality in the district of Tuttlingen in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

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Alekanovo inscription

The Alekanovo inscription is a group of undeciphered characters found in the fall of 1897 in the Russian village of Alekanovo (Vologda Oblast) by Russian archeologist Vasily Gorodtsov.

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Aleksandar Bošković

Aleksandar Bošković is a social anthropologist from former Yugoslavia, who published thirteen books and several hundred articles and book reviews on history and theory of anthropology, from a transactionalist and comparative perspective.

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Aleksandar Stipčević

Aleksandar Stipčević (October 10, 1930 – September 1, 2015) was a Croatian-Albanian archeologist, bibliographer, librarian and historian who specialized in the study of the Illyrians.

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Aleksey Lidov

Alexei Mikhailovich Lidov (Russian: Алексей́ Михай́лович Ли́дов) is a Russian art historian and byzantinist, an author of the concepts hierotopy and spatial icon, member of the Russian Academy of Arts.

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Alesia (city)

Alesia was the capital of the Mandubii, one of the Gallic tribes allied with the Aedui.

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Alessandra Nibbi

Alessandra Nibbi (June 30, 1923 – January 15, 2007) was an Italian-born Australian archaeologist.

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Aleut

The Aleuts (Алеу́ты Aleuty), who are usually known in the Aleut language by the endonyms Unangan (eastern dialect), Unangas (western dialect), Alaska Native Language Center.

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Alex Bayliss

Alex Bayliss is a British archaeologist, Head of Scientific Dating at Historic England, and a part-time Professor of Archaeological Science at the University of Stirling in Scotland.

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Alex Nyerges

Alex Nyerges (born 1957) is the director of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts since 2006, He was also director and CEO at the Dayton Art Institute from 1992 to 2006, as well as the executive director of the Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson, Mississippi and the DeLand Museum of Art in Deland, Florida.

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Alexander Conze

Alexander Christian Leopold Conze (10 December 1831 – 19 July 1914) was a German archaeologist, who specialized in ancient Greek art.

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Alexander H. Joffe

Alexander H. Joffe (born 1959) Alex Joffe is an archaeologist and historian of the Near East.

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Alexander Henry Rhind

Alexander Henry Rhind (26 July 1833 – 3 July 1863) was a Scottish antiquarian and archaeologist.

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Alexander Kennedy

Sir Alexander Blackie William Kennedy, LLD, FRS, FRGS (17 March 1847 – 1 November 1928), better known simply as Alexander Kennedy, was a leading British civil and electrical engineer and academic.

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Alexander Marshack

Alexander Marshack (April 4, 1918 – December 20, 2004) was an American independent scholar and Paleolithic archaeologist.

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Alexander Pechtold

Alexander Pechtold (born 16 December 1965) is a Dutch politician of the Democrats 66 (D66) party.

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Alexander Philadelpheus

Alexander Philadelpheus (Greek: Αλέξανδρος Θ. Φιλαδελφεύς; 1866–1955) was a distinguished Greek archaeologist, historian, painter, writer and philosopher.

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Alexander Pol

Alexander Pol (Олександр Миколайович Поль; 20 August 1832 – 26 July 1890) was a Ukrainian archaeologist, geologist, ethnographer and businessman who became known after discovering Kryvbas, a major iron ore region of Eastern Europe.

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Alexander Ruttkay

Alexander Ruttkay (born 4 April 1941) is a Slovak archeologist and historian.

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Alexander Selkirk

Alexander Selkirk (167613 December 1721) was a Scottish privateer and Royal Navy officer who spent four years and four months as a castaway (1704–1709) after being marooned by his captain on an uninhabited island in the South Pacific Ocean.

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Alexander Stuart Murray

Alexander Stuart Murray, FBA (8 January 1841March, 1904) was a Scottish archaeologist.

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Alexander the Great in the Quran

The story of Dhul-Qarnayn (in Arabic ذو القرنين, literally "The Two-Horned One", also transliterated as Zul-Qarnain or Zulqarnain), mentioned in the Quran, may be a reference to Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BC), popularly known as Alexander the Great.

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Alexander Thom

Alexander "Sandy" Thom (26 March 1894 – 7 November 1985) was a Scottish engineer most famous for his theory of the Megalithic yard, categorisation of stone circles and his studies of Stonehenge and other archaeological sites.

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Alexander Vallaury

Alexander Vallaury (1850-1921) was a French-Ottoman architect, who founded architectural education and lectured in the School of Fine Arts in Constantinople (Istanbul), Ottoman Empire.

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Alexandra Jones (archaeologist)

Alexandra Jones is a historical archaeologist and educator.

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Alexandre Bertrand

Alexandre Louis Joseph Bertrand (11 June 1820 – 1902) was a French archaeologist born in Rennes.

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Alexandre Du Mège

Louis Charles André Alexandre Du Mège or Dumège, (born The Hague (Netherlands) 5 December 1780 - Toulouse 6 June 1862), was a French scholar, archaeologist and historian.

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Alexandre Grandazzi

Alexandre Grandazzi (born 8 February 1957) is a French university professor, a specialist of archaeology and Roman history.

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Alexandre Jacques François Bertrand

Alexandre Jacques François Bertrand (25 April 1795 – 22 January 1831) was a French physician and mesmerist who was a native of Rennes.

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Alexandria

Alexandria (or; Arabic: الإسكندرية; Egyptian Arabic: إسكندرية; Ⲁⲗⲉⲝⲁⲛⲇⲣⲓⲁ; Ⲣⲁⲕⲟⲧⲉ) is the second-largest city in Egypt and a major economic centre, extending about along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea in the north central part of the country.

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Alexandria Bucephalous

Alexandria Bucephalous (also variously known as Alexandria Bucephalus, Alexandria Bucephala, Bucephala, or Bucephalia), was a city founded by Alexander the Great in memory of his beloved horse Bucephalus.

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Alexandria on the Caucasus

Alexandria in the Caucasus (medieval Kapisa, modern Bagram) was a colony of Alexander the Great (one of many colonies designated with the name Alexandria).

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Alexandrian school

The Alexandrian school is a collective designation for certain tendencies in literature, philosophy, medicine, and the sciences that developed in the Hellenistic cultural center of Alexandria, Egypt during the Hellenistic and Roman periods.

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Alexandru Odobescu

Alexandru Ioan Odobescu (23 June 1834 – 10 November 1895) was a Romanian author, archaeologist and politician.

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Alexandru Vulpe

Alexandru Vulpe (June 16, 1931 – February 9, 2016) was a Romanian historian and archaeologist, member of the Romanian Academy and director of the Vasile Pârvan Institute of Archaeology.

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Alexei Kondratiev

Alexei Kondratiev (1949–2010) was an American author, linguist, and teacher of Celtic languages, folklore and culture.

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Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia

Alexei Petrovich Romanov (28 February 1690 – 7 July 1718) was a Russian Tsarevich.

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Alexey Okladnikov

Alexey Pavlovich Okladnikov (Алексе́й Па́влович Окла́дников; 1908–1981) was a Soviet archaeologist, historian, and ethnographer, an expert in the ancient cultures of Siberia and the Pacific Basin.

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Alexey Olenin

Alexey Nikolayevich Olenin (Aleksey Nikolaevich Olenin, Алексей Николаевич Оленин; in Moscow – in Saint Petersburg) was a Russian archaeologist, most notable for being a director of the Imperial Public Library between 1811 and 1843 and the sixth president of the Imperial Academy of Arts between 1817 and 1843.

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Alfonso Caso

Alfonso Caso y Andrade (February 1, 1896 in Mexico City – November 30, 1970 in Mexico City) was an archaeologist who made important contributions to pre-Columbian studies in his native Mexico.

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Alfred Brueckner

Alfred Brueckner (7 September 1861, Magdeburg – 15 January 1936, Berlin) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Alfred Charles Auguste Foucher

Alfred Charles Auguste Foucher (1865–1952), a French scholar, identified the Buddha image as having Greek origins.

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Alfred Dieck

Alfred Dieck (4 April 1906 in Schönebeck – 7 January 1989 in Bremen) was a German archaeologist internationally recognised for the scientific studies on bog bodies and bog finds.

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Alfred Duggan

Alfred Duggan (1903–1964) was a British historian, archeologist and best-selling historical novelist during the 1950s.

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Alfred E. Emerson

Alfred Edwards Emerson, Jr. (December 31, 1896 – October 3, 1976) was an American biologist, Professor of Zoology at the University of Chicago, a noted entomologist and leading authority on termites.

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Alfred E. Johnson

Alfred E. Johnson was an anthropologist and archaeologist at the University of Kansas.

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Alfred Irving Hallowell

Alfred Irving "Pete" Hallowell (1892–1974) was an American anthropologist, archaeologist and businessman.

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Alfred Körte

Alfred Körte (September 5, 1866 – September 6, 1946) was a German classical philologist who was a native of Berlin.

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Alfred L. Kroeber

Alfred Louis Kroeber (June 11, 1876 – October 5, 1960) was an American cultural anthropologist.

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Alfred Louis Delattre

Alfred Louis Delattre (26 June 1850 – 12 January 1932) was a French archaeologist, born at Déville-lès-Rouen.

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Alfred Maudslay

Alfred Percival Maudslay (18 March 1850 – 22 January 1931) was a British diplomat, explorer and archaeologist.

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Alfred Rust

Alfred Rust (July 4, 1900 Hamburg - August 14, 1983 Ahrensburg) was a German prehistoric archaeologist.

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Alfred Schuler

Alfred Schuler (* 22 November 1865 in Mainz; † 8 April 1923 in Munich) was a religious founder, a gnostic, a mystic and a visionary.

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Alfred Tozzer

Alfred Marston Tozzer (4 July 1877 – 5 October 1954) was an American anthropologist, archaeologist, linguist, and educator.

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Alfred V. Kidder

Alfred Vincent Kidder (October 29, 1885 – June 11, 1963) was an American archaeologist considered the foremost of the southwestern United States and Mesoamerica during the first half of the 20th century.

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Alfred von Domaszewski

Alfred von Domaszewski (October 30, 1856 – March 25, 1927) was an Austrian historian born in Timișoara in the Habsburg Monarchy.

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Alfred Watkins

Alfred Watkins (27 January 1855 – 15 April 1935) was an English author, self-taught amateur archaeologist, antiquarian and businessman who, while standing on a hillside in Herefordshire, England, in 1921 experienced a revelation and noticed on the British landscape the apparent arrangement of straight lines positioned along ancient features, and subsequently coined the term "ley", now usually referred to as ley line, because the line passed through places whose names contained the syllable "ley".

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Alfred Werner Maurer

Alfred Werner Maurer (*1945 in Saarbrücken) is an international German architect, urban planner, architectural historian, archaeologists and art historian.

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Alfredo Chavero

Alfredo Chavero (1841–1906) was a Mexican archaeologist, politician, poet, and dramatist.

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Alfredo E. Evangelista

Alfredo E. Evangelista (1926 – October 18, 2008) was a Filipino archeologist.

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Alfredo Jahn

Dr.

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Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award

The Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award is an award presented to graduating seniors, alumni, and community members of selected colleges and universities in the Southern United States for excellence of character and service to humanity.

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Algonquin people

The Algonquins are indigenous inhabitants of North America who speak the Algonquin language, a divergent dialect of the Ojibwe language, which is part of the Algonquian language family.

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Algoz

Algoz is a former civil parish in the municipality of Silves, Portugal.

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Alhaurín de la Torre

Alhaurín de la Torre is a town in the province of Málaga, Andalusia, in southern Spain.

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Ali Akbar Sarfaraz

Dr.

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Alice Beck Kehoe

Alice Beck Kehoe (born 1934, New York City) is an anthropologist.

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Alice Gardner

Alice Gardner (26 April 1854 – 11 November 1927) was an English historian.

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Alice Leslie Walker

Alice "Mopsie" Leslie Walker (June 26, 1885 – June 25, 1954) was an American archeologist and leading expert on the Neolithic Period in Southern Greece.

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Alice Stevenson (archaeologist)

Alice Stevenson is a British archaeologist and museum curator.

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Alicudi

Alicudi is the westernmost of the eight islands that make up the Aeolian archipelago, a volcanic island chain north of Sicily.

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Alien from L.A.

Alien From L.A. is a 1988 science fiction film that stars Kathy Ireland as a young woman who visits the underground civilization of Atlantis.

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Alignment (archaeology)

An alignment in archaeology refers to a co-linear arrangement of features or structures with external landmarks, in archaeoastronomy the term may refer to an alignment with an astronomically significant point or axis.

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Alireza Shapour Shahbazi

Alireza Shapour Shahbazi (4 September 1942 Shiraz - 15 July 2006 Walla Walla, Washington) (علیرضا شاپور شهبازی) was a prominent Persian archeologist, Iranologist and a world expert on Achaemenid archeology.

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Alison Betts

Alison Venetia Graham Betts, is a British archaeologist and academic, who specialises in the "archaeology of the lands along the Silk Roads" and the nomadic peoples of the Near East.

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Alison Doody

Alison Doody (born 11 November 1966) is an Irish actress and model.

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Alison S. Brooks

Alison S. Brooks is an American paleoanthropologist and archaeologist whose work focuses on the Paleolithic, particularly the Middle Stone Age of Africa.

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Alison Spedding

Alison Louise Spedding (born 22 January 1962 - Belper, England) is a British anthropologist and fantasy author.

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Alison Wylie

Alison Wylie (born 1954) is a British-Canadian philosopher and archaeologist.

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Alkali Ridge

Alkali Ridge, also known as Alkali Point, is a set of widely scattered archaeological remains of the earliest forms of Puebloan architecture, representing a period of transition from scattered, pit-style dwellings to a settled agricultural lifestyle.

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All Saints' Church, Shuart

All Saints' Church, Shuart, in the north-west of the Isle of Thanet, Kent, in the south-east of England, was established in the Anglo-Saxon period as a chapel of ease for the parish of St Mary's Church, Reculver, which was centred on the north-eastern corner of mainland Kent, adjacent to the island.

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Alla Ter-Sarkisiants

Alla Yervandovna "Yervandi" Ter-Sarkisiants (Ալլա Երվանդի Տեր-Սարգսյանց; Алла Ервандовна Тер-Саркисянц) is a preeminent historian and ethnographer of Armenia, doctor of historical sciences, leading specialist of the Caucasus department of N. N. Miklukho-Maklai Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.

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Allahdino

Allahdino is a small village belonging to the Harappan period, located 40 km east of Karachi.

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Allard Pierson Museum

The Allard Pierson Museum is the archaeological museum of the University of Amsterdam.

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Allegra Stratton

Allegra Stratton (born 25 November 1980) is a British journalist and writer.

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Allendale County, South Carolina

Allendale County is a county in the U.S. state of South Carolina.

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Alliat

Alliat is a commune in the Ariège department and Occitanie region in southwestern France.

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Alligator Effigy Mound

The Alligator Effigy Mound is an effigy mound in Granville, Ohio, United States.

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Ally Kennen

Ally Kennen (born 1975) is a British author of adventure novels for children and teens.

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Alnwick Castle

Alnwick Castle is a castle and stately home in Alnwick in the English county of Northumberland.

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Alojz Benac

Alojz Benac (Plehan, Derventa, October 20, 1914 – Sarajevo, March 6, 1992).

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Alone in the Dark (2005 film)

Alone in the Dark is a 2005 Canadian-German-American action horror film loosely based on the fourth installment of Infogrames' video game series of the same name.

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Aloys Hirt

Aloys Hirt (27 June 1759 – 29 June 1837) was a German art historian and archaeologist of Ancient Greek and Roman architecture.

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Alphons Stübel

Moritz Alphons Stübel (26 July 1835 – 10 November 1904) was a German geologist and vulcanologist who was a native of Leipzig.

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Alta, Norway

Alta (Áltá; Alattio or Alta) is the most populated municipality in Finnmark county, Norway.

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Altagracia

Altagracia is a municipality in the Rivas Department of Nicaragua.

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Altars in Latin America

The history of altars in Latin America is complex and is often deemed paradoxical; as its original purpose was for the worshipping of gods and human sacrifice.

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Altavista (disambiguation)

Altavista is the name given to multiple things in North America.

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Altenbamberg

Altenbamberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Altenglan

Altenglan is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Altenkirchen, Kusel

Altenkirchen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Alternative theories of the Hungarian language relations

Current linguistic theory suggests that the Hungarian language belongs to the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic language family.

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Altheim, Austria

Altheim is a town in western Austria.

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Alton, Illinois

Alton is a city on the Mississippi River in Madison County, Illinois, United States, about north of St. Louis, Missouri.

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Altona, New York

Altona is a town in Clinton County, New York, United States.

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Altweidelbach

Altweidelbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Alumni of the American University of Beirut

This is a list of alumni and former students of the American University of Beirut.

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Alwin Schultz

Alwin Schultz (6 August 1838 – 10 March 1909) was a German art historian and medievalist, professor of art history at the Charles University in Prague.

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Alwynne Cooper Wheeler

Alwynne (Wyn) Wheeler was a British ichthyologist who was a curator at the Natural History Museum in London.

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Amalek

Amalek (عماليق) is a nation described in the Old Testament of the Hebrew Bible.

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Amanda Adams

Amanda Adams (born September 12, 1976) is an American author and archaeologist.

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Amar Singh (historian)

Amar Singh is an Indian educational administrator, historian, archaeologist and retired professor.

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Amarna

Amarna (al-ʿamārnah) is an extensive Egyptian archaeological site that represents the remains of the capital city newly established and built by the Pharaoh Akhenaten of the late Eighteenth Dynasty, and abandoned shortly after his death (1332 BC).

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Amasra Museum

Amasra Museum (Amasra Müzesi) is a museum in Amasra district of Bartın Province, northwestern Turkey.

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Amasya Museum

Amasya Museum, also known as Archaeological Museum of Amasya (Amasya Müzesi or Amasya Arkeoloji Müzesi) is a national museum in Amasya, northern Turkey, exhibiting archaeological artifacts found in and around the city as well as ethnographic items related to the region's history of cultural life.

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Amathus

Amathus or Amathous (Ἀμαθοῦς) was an ancient city and one of the ancient royal cities of Cyprus until about 300 BC.

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Amazon rainforest

The Amazon rainforest (Portuguese: Floresta Amazônica or Amazônia; Selva Amazónica, Amazonía or usually Amazonia; Forêt amazonienne; Amazoneregenwoud), also known in English as Amazonia or the Amazon Jungle, is a moist broadleaf forest in the Amazon biome that covers most of the Amazon basin of South America.

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Amazon River

The Amazon River (or; Spanish and Amazonas) in South America is the largest river by discharge volume of water in the world, and either the longest or second longest.

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Amazonas Region

Amazonas is a region of northern Peru bordered by Ecuador on the north and west, Cajamarca Region on the west, La Libertad Region on the south, and Loreto Region and San Martín Region on the east.

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Amazons

In Greek mythology, the Amazons (Ἀμαζόνες,, singular Ἀμαζών) were a tribe of women warriors related to Scythians and Sarmatians.

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Amda Seyon I

Amda Seyon I (also Amde Tsiyon and other variants, Ge'ez ዐምደ ፡ ጽዮን ʿamda ṣiyōn, Amharic āmde ṣiyōn, "Pillar of Zion") was Emperor of Ethiopia (1314–1344; throne name Gebre Mesqel Ge'ez ገብረ ፡ መስቀል gabra masḳal, Amh. gebre mesḳel, "slave of the cross"), and a member of the Solomonic dynasty.

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Amelia Island Museum of History

The Amelia Island Museum of History is located at 233 South Third Street, Fernandina Beach, Florida.

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Amelia Peabody

Amelia Peabody Emerson is the protagonist of the Amelia Peabody series, a series of historical mystery novels written by author Elizabeth Peters (a pseudonym of Egyptologist Barbara Mertz, 1927–2013).

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America's Stonehenge

America's Stonehenge is an archaeological site consisting of a number of large rocks and stone structures scattered around roughly within the town of Salem, New Hampshire in the United States.

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American Academy of Arts and Sciences

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences is one of the oldest learned societies in the United States of America.

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American and British English spelling differences

Many of the differences between American and British English date back to a time when spelling standards had not yet developed.

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American Anthropological Association

The American Anthropological Association (AAA) is an organization of scholars and practitioners in the field of anthropology.

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American anthropology

American anthropology has culture as its central and unifying concept.

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American Antiquity

The professional journal American Antiquity is published by the Society for American Archaeology, the largest organization of professional archaeologists of the Americas in the world.

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American Council for Cultural Policy

American Council for Cultural Policy (ACCP) was a not-for-profit organization formed in 2002 by a group of politically influential antiquities dealers, collectors and lawyers in the United States, with its headquarters in New York and representatives in Washington D.C..

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American Digger (magazine)

American Digger is a bimonthly magazine about the hobby of recovering historical artifacts based in the United States.

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American Journal of Archaeology

The American Journal of Archaeology (AJA), the peer-reviewed journal of the Archaeological Institute of America, has been published since 1897 (continuing the American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts founded by the institute in 1885).

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American Quaternary Association

The American Quaternary Association (AMQUA) is a professional organization of North American scientists devoted to studies of the quaternary geological period.

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American River

The American River (Río de los Americanos during the period before 1847 ruled by Mexico) is a 120-mile-long river in California that runs from the Sierra Nevada mountain range to its confluence with the Sacramento River in the Sacramento Valley.

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American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing

The American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ASPRS) is an American learned society devoted to photogrammetry.

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American Treasures

American Treasures is a reality television show on Discovery Channel.

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American University of Rome

The American University of Rome (commonly referred to as AUR) is a degree-granting American university in Rome, Italy.

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American urban history

American urban history is the study of cities of the United States.

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Americas

The Americas (also collectively called America)"America." The Oxford Companion to the English Language.

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Americas (terminology)

The Americas, also known as America,"America." The Oxford Companion to the English Language.

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Amerind Foundation

The Amerind Foundation is a museum and research facility dedicated to the preservation and interpretation of Native American cultures and their histories.

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Amersham Museum

Amersham Museum is a small local museum based in Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England.

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Amiens

Amiens is a city and commune in northern France, north of Paris and south-west of Lille.

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Amihai Mazar

Amihai "Ami" Mazar (עמיחי מזר; born 1942) is an Israeli archaeologist.

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Amino acid dating

Amino acid dating is a dating technique used to estimate the age of a specimen in paleobiology, molecular paleontology, archaeology, forensic science, taphonomy, sedimentary geology and other fields.

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Amir Drori

Amir Drori (אמיר דרורי; 1937–2005) was an Israeli general, founder and the first director general of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

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Ammonium chloride

Ammonium chloride is an inorganic compound with the formula NH4Cl and a white crystalline salt that is highly soluble in water.

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Amorphism

An Amorphism, in chemistry, crystallography and, by extension, to other areas of the natural sciences is a substance or feature that lacks an ordered form.

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Amy B. H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden

The Amy B. H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden is a botanical garden near Captain Cook, Hawaii in the Kona District on the Big Island of Hawaii.

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An Acceptable Time

An Acceptable Time is a 1989 young adult science fiction novel by Madeleine L'Engle, the last of her books to feature Polyhymnia O'Keefe, better known as Poly (The Arm of the Starfish, Dragons in the Waters) or Polly (A House Like a Lotus, An Acceptable Time).

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An American Tail: The Treasure of Manhattan Island

An American Tail: The Treasure of Manhattan Island (also known as An American Tail III: The Treasure of Manhattan Island) is a 1998 American animated family musical film produced by Universal Cartoon Studios (now Universal Animation Studios), directed by Larry Latham and animated overseas by the Japanese studio TMS-Kyokuichi Corporation (now TMS Entertainment).

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An Outline of Modern Knowledge

An Outline of Modern Knowledge, published by Victor Gollancz in 1931, was an “omnibus” volume intended to survey the full range of human knowledge.

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Ana Lake

Ana Lake is a Patagonian lake in the Pali-Aike National Park.

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Ana María Groot

Ana María Groot de Mahecha (Bogotá, 29 August 1952) is a Colombian historian, archaeologist, anthropologist and associate professor at the Department of Anthropology of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia.

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Ana Margarida Arruda

Ana Margarida Costa Arruda dos Santos Gonçalves (born in 1955) is a Portuguese historian and archaeologist specialized in Phoenician-Punic archaeology.

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Ana Romero Masiá

Ana Romero Masiá (Santiago de Compostela, 4 January 1952) is a Galician historian, archaeologist, and academic.

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Anabel Ford

Anabel Ford (born 22 December 1951) is an American archaeologist specializing in the study of Mesoamerica, with a focus on the lowland Maya of Belize and Guatemala.

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Anabisetia

Anabisetia is a genus of iguanodont dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous Period of Patagonia, South America.

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Anadenanthera peregrina

Anadenanthera peregrina, also known as yopo, jopo, cohoba, parica or calcium tree, is a perennial tree of the genus Anadenanthera native to the Caribbean and South America.

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Anagarika Govinda

Anagarika Govinda (born Ernst Lothar Hoffmann, 17 May 1898 – 14 January 1985) was the founder of the order of the Arya Maitreya Mandala and an expositor of Tibetan Buddhism, Abhidharma, and Buddhist meditation as well as other aspects of Buddhism.

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Anahulu River

The Anahulu River (also called Anahulu Stream) is a watercourse on the island of Oahu in the U.S. state of Hawaii.

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Analysis

Analysis is the process of breaking a complex topic or substance into smaller parts in order to gain a better understanding of it.

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Anamur Museum

Anamur Museum is in Anamur ilçe (district) of Mersin Province, Turkey.

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Ananda Temple

The Ananda Temple (အာနႏၵာဘုရား), located in Bagan, Myanmar is a Buddhist temple built in 1105 AD during the reign (1084–1113) of King Kyanzittha of the Pagan Dynasty.

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Anangula Island

Anangula Island (also called Ananiuliak Island; occasionally referred to as Kurityien Anaiuliak, Anaiuliak, Anayulyakh or Anangouliak) is a small island in the Fox Islands group of the Aleutian Islands of southwestern Alaska.

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Anant Sadashiv Altekar

Anant Sadashiv Altekar (1898–1960; Devanagari: अनंत सदाशिव आळतेकर) was a historian, archaeologist, and numismatist from Maharashtra, India.

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Anarcho-primitivism

Anarcho-primitivism is an anarchist critique of the origins and progress of civilization.

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Anasazi Heritage Center

Anasazi Heritage Center, located in Dolores, Colorado, is an archaeological museum of Native American pueblo and hunter-gatherer cultures.

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Anasazi State Park Museum

Anasazi State Park Museum is a state park and museum in Southern Utah, United States, featuring the ruins of an ancient Anasazi village referred to as the Coombs Village Site.

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Anastasia Romanovna

Anastasia Romanovna Zakharyina-Yurieva (1530 – 7 August 1560) was the first spouse of the Russian Tsar Ivan the Terrible and the first Russian Tsaritsa.

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Anastasio Cuschieri

Anastastio Cuschieri (1872–1962) was a Maltese poet, politician, and minor philosopher.

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Anastylosis

Anastylosis (from the Ancient Greek: αναστήλωσις, -εως; ανα, ana.

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Anatole Jean-Baptiste Antoine de Barthélemy

Anatole Jean-Baptiste Antoine de Barthélemy (1 July 182127 June 1904) was a French archaeologist and numismatist.

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Anatole Klyosov

Anatole A. Klyosov (born 20 November 1946 in Chernyakhovsk, Kaliningrad Oblast of Russian SFSR) is a scientist who worked in the fields of physical chemistry, enzyme catalysis, and industrial biochemistry.

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Anatolian hypothesis

The Anatolian hypothesis, also known as the Anatolian theory or the sedentary farmer theory, first developed by British archaeologist Colin Renfrew in 1987, proposes that the dispersal of Proto-Indo-Europeans originated in Neolithic Anatolia.

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Anatolian Shepherd

The Anatolian Shepherd Dog (Anadolu çoban köpeği) is a breed of dog which originated in the Anatolia region of central Turkey.

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Anatoly Belkin

Anatoly Pavlovich Belkin (Анатолий Павлович Белкин; born 1953) is a contemporary Russian artist based in St. Petersburg.

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Anatoly Derevyanko

Anatoly Derevyanko (Анатолий Пантелеевич Деревянко; 9 January 1943, Kozmodemyanovka village, Amur Oblast) — is a Soviet/Russian historian, archaeologist, scientist in the field of Siberian and Far East`s Paleolith; public man; Ph.

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Anatoly Khazanov

Anatoly Mikhailovich Khazanov (Russian: Анато́лий Миха́йлович Хазáнов, born December 13, 1937) is an anthropologist and historian.

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Anāl Naga

The Anāl is a Naga tribe native to Manipur state in North-East India and part of Myanmar.

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Anıtkabir

Anıtkabir (literally, "memorial tomb") is the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the leader of the Turkish War of Independence and the founder and first President of the Republic of Turkey.

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Ancalites

The Ancalites were a tribe of Iron Age Britain in the first century BCE.

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Ancestral Puebloans

The Ancestral Puebloans were an ancient Native American culture that spanned the present-day Four Corners region of the United States, comprising southeastern Utah, northeastern Arizona, northwestern New Mexico, and southwestern Colorado.

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Ancient Aliens

Ancient Aliens is an American television series that premiered on April 20, 2010, on the History channel.

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Ancient astronauts

"Ancient astronauts" (or "ancient aliens") refers to the pseudoscientific idea that intelligent extraterrestrial beings visited Earth and made contact with humans in antiquity and prehistoric times.

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Ancient Bath House of Nazareth

The Ancient Bath House of Nazareth was discovered in the late 1990s by Elias and Martina Shama during renovations inside their shop near Mary's Well in Nazareth.

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Ancient Beringian

The Ancient Beringians are the earliest known population of Alaska, who migrated from Beringia and into Alaska during the lithic stage sometime prior to 11,500 years ago.

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Ancient Carthage

Carthage (from Carthago; Punic:, Qart-ḥadašt, "New City") was the Phoenician state, including, during the 7th–3rd centuries BC, its wider sphere of influence, known as the Carthaginian Empire.

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Ancient DNA

Ancient DNA (aDNA) is DNA isolated from ancient specimens.

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Ancient Egypt (magazine)

Ancient Egypt is a magazine that deals with the subject of Egyptology.

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Ancient Egyptian retainer sacrifices

Ancient Egyptian retainer sacrifice is a type of human sacrifice in which pharaohs and occasionally other high court nobility would have servants killed after the pharaohs' deaths to continue to serve them in the afterlife.

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Ancient footprints of Acahualinca

The Ancient footprints of Acahualinca (Huellas de Acahualinca) exist in Managua, Nicaragua near the southern shore of Lake Managua.

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Ancient Greece

Ancient Greece was a civilization belonging to a period of Greek history from the Greek Dark Ages of the 13th–9th centuries BC to the end of antiquity (AD 600).

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Ancient Greece and wine

The influence of wine in ancient Greece helped Ancient Greece trade with neighboring countries and regions.

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Ancient history

Ancient history is the aggregate of past events, "History" from the beginning of recorded human history and extending as far as the Early Middle Ages or the post-classical history.

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Ancient history of Afghanistan

Archaeological exploration of the pre-Islamic period of Afghanistan began in Afghanistan in earnest after World War II and proceeded until the late 1970s when the nation was invaded by the Soviet Union.

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Ancient iron production

Ancient iron production refers to iron working in times from prehistory to the early Middle Ages where knowledge of production processes is derived from archaeological investigation.

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Ancient Israelite cuisine

Ancient Israelite cuisine refers to the food eaten by the ancient Israelites during a period of over a thousand years, from the beginning of the Israelite presence in the Land of Israel at the beginning of the Iron Age until the Roman period.

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Ancient Kymissala

The archaeological site of ancient Kymissala is located about 70 km southwest of Rhodes city, and today falls within the limits of the Municipality of Atavyros, occupying coastal areas of Monolithos and Sianna municipal departments.

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Ancient Libya

The Latin name Libya (from Greek Λιβύη, Libyē) referred to the region west of the Nile generally corresponding to the modern Maghreb.

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Ancient Mesopotamian religion

Mesopotamian religion refers to the religious beliefs and practices of the civilizations of ancient Mesopotamia, particularly Sumer, Akkad, Assyria and Babylonia between circa 3500 BC and 400 AD, after which they largely gave way to Syriac Christianity.

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Ancient monument

In British law, an ancient monument is an early historical structure or monument (e.g. an archaeological site) worthy of preservation and study due to archaeological or heritage interest.

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Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979

The Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 or AMAAA was a law passed by the UK government, the latest in a series of Ancient Monument Acts legislating to protect the archaeological heritage of England & Wales and Scotland.

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Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley

Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley (full title Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley: Comprising the Results of Extensive Original Surveys and Explorations) (1848) by the Americans Ephraim George Squier and Edwin Hamilton Davis is a landmark in American scientific research, the study of the prehistoric indigenous mound builders of North America, and the early development of archaeology as a scientific discipline.

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Ancient Near East Monographs

Ancient Near East Monographs is an open-access monograph series focused on the Ancient Near East, including ancient Israel and its literature, from the early Neolithic to the early Hellenistic eras.

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Ancient protein

Ancient proteins are the remains of proteins which persist in the archaeological and fossil record.

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Ancient Rome

In historiography, ancient Rome is Roman civilization from the founding of the city of Rome in the 8th century BC to the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD, encompassing the Roman Kingdom, Roman Republic and Roman Empire until the fall of the western empire.

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Ancient Ruins and Archaeology

Ancient Ruins and Archaeology is a 1964 science book by L. Sprague de Camp and Catherine Crook de Camp, one of their most popular works.

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Ancient Society

Ancient Society is an 1877 book by the American anthropologist Lewis H. Morgan.

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Ancient trackway

Ancient trackway can refer to any track or trail whose origin is lost in antiquity.

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Ancient Warfare (magazine)

Ancient Warfare is a glossy Dutch bi-monthly military history magazine.

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Andaman and Nicobar Islands

The Andaman and Nicobar Islands, one of the seven union territories of India, are a group of islands at the juncture of the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea.

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Andaman Islands

The Andaman Islands form an archipelago in the Bay of Bengal between India, to the west, and Myanmar, to the north and east.

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Andean civilizations

The Andean civilizations were a patchwork of different cultures and peoples that developed from the Andes of Colombia southward down the Andes to northern Argentina and Chile, plus the coastal deserts of Peru and northern Chile.

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Andean preceramic

Andean preceramic refers to the early period of human occupation in the Andean area of South America that preceded the introduction of ceramics.

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Anders Franzén

Anders Franzén (23 July 1918 – 8 December 1993) was a Swedish marine technician and an amateur naval archaeologist.

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Andorra

Andorra, officially the Principality of Andorra (Principat d'Andorra), also called the Principality of the Valleys of Andorra (Principat de les Valls d'Andorra), is a sovereign landlocked microstate on the Iberian Peninsula, in the eastern Pyrenees, bordered by France in the north and Spain in the south.

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André Boulanger

André Boulanger (26 July 1886 – 9 September 1958) was a French professor of literature and Latin scholar who shared his activity between archeology and the teaching profession.

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André de Resende

André de Resende (1498–1573), the father of archaeology in Portugal, a Dominican friar.

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André Godard

André Godard (21 January 1881 – 31 July 1965) was an archaeologist, architect and historian of French and Middle Eastern Art.

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André Jodin

André Jodin is an archaeologist known for explorations and excavations in North Africa, especially in Morocco.

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André Laronde

Cyrene, 1973 André Laronde (19 June 1940, Grenoble – 1 February 2011, Paris, aged 70) was a French hellenist archaeologist.

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André Leroi-Gourhan

André Leroi-Gourhan (25 August 1911 – 19 February 1986) was a French archaeologist, paleontologist, paleoanthropologist, and anthropologist with an interest in technology and aesthetics and a penchant for philosophical reflection.

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André Parrot

André Parrot (15 February 1901, Doubs – 24 August 1980, Paris) was a French archaeologist specializing in the ancient Near East.

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André Piganiol

André Piganiol (17 January 1883 – 24 May 1968) was a French historian and archaeologist.

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André Plassart

André Plassart (24 August 1889 – 13 May 1978) was a 20th-century French hellenist, epigrapher and archaeologist.

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Andrés del Corral

Andrés del Corral (1748–1818) was a Spanish writer and archeologist.

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Andrés Neumann

Andrés Neumann (born 1943) is a polyglot design thinker and performing arts and creative and cultural industries professional, born in Bolivia, raised in Uruguay and established in Europe.

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Andrea Carandini

Count Andrea Carandini (born November 3, 1937) is an Italian professor of archaeology specialising in ancient Rome.

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Andrea De Jorio

Andrea De Jorio (1769–1851) was an Italian antiquarian who is remembered today among ethnographers as the first ethnographer of body language, in his work La mimica degli antichi investigata nel gestire napoletano, 1832 ("The mime of the Ancients investigated through Neapolitan gesture").

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Andrea Mantegna

Andrea Mantegna (September 13, 1506) was an Italian painter, a student of Roman archeology, and son-in-law of Jacopo Bellini.

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Andreas Alföldi

András (Andreas) Ede Zsigmond Alföldi (27 August 1895 – 12 February 1981) was a Hungarian historian, art historian, epigraphist, numismatist and archaeologist, specializing in the Late Antique period.

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Andreas G Orphanides

Andreas G. Orphanides (Greek: Ανδρέας Γρ. Ορφανίδης; born 29 May 1955; from: Lapithos (Λάπηθος), Cyprus) is Council Member of the Cyprus Agency of Quality Assurance and Accreditation in Higher Education, and Professor of Humanities and Social Sciences (History, Archaeology and Anthropology) at European University Cyprus (EUC), having previously served and taught at universities and at other higher education institutions in the USA, Greece and Cyprus.

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Andrew Birley

Andrew Robin Birley (born 28 October 1974) is a British archaeologist and the Director of Excavations on the site of Vindolanda.

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Andrew Garrard

Andrew Garrard is a British archaeologist and Reader in Early Prehistory at the UCL Institute of Archaeology.

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Andrew M. T. Moore

Andrew Michael Tangye Moore, also known as A. M. T. Moore, is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Andrew Pettigrew

Andrew Marshall Pettigrew OBE (born 11 June 1944) is Professor of Strategy and Organisation at the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford.

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Andrew Reynolds (archaeologist)

Andrew Reynolds is an English archaeologist specialising in the study of Mediaeval Britain.

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Andrew Sherratt

Andrew Sherratt (8 May 1946 – 24 February 2006) was an English archaeologist, one of the most influential of his generation.

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Andrew Tylecote

Andrew Tylecote (born 3 January 1946) is a British economist based at The University of Sheffield School of Management.

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Andrew Wallace-Hadrill

Andrew Frederic Wallace-Hadrill, (born 29 July 1951) is a British ancient historian, classical archaeologist, and academic.

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Andries DuBois House

The Andries DuBois House is located on Wallkill Avenue in the hamlet of Wallkill, New York, USA.

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Andriy Valentinov

Andriy Valentínov (Ukrainian: Андрій Валентинов, Russian: Андрей Валентинов) (born March 18, 1958) is the pen name of Ukrainian science/fantasy fiction writer Andréy Valentínovich Shmalkó.

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Andro Krstulović Opara

Andro Krstulović Opara (born 22 May 1967 in Split) is a Croatian politician and art historian who has been Mayor of Split since 14 June 2017.

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Anedjib

Anedjib, more correctly Adjib and also known as Hor-Anedjib, Hor-Adjib and Enezib, is the Horus name of an early Egyptian king who ruled during the 1st dynasty.

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Anemospilia

Anemospilia(τα Ανεμόσπηλια)is the archaeological site of an ancient Minoan temple on Crete.

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Angel Mounds

Angel Mounds State Historic Site (12 VG 1) is located on the Ohio River in Vanderburgh and Warrick counties in the southwestern corner of the U.S. state of Indiana.

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Angel Phase

The Angel Phase describes a 300-400-year cultural manifestation of the Mississippian culture of the central portions of the United States of America, as defined in the discipline of archaeology.

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Angelina National Forest

Angelina National Forest is a United States National Forest, one of four located in Texas.

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Anglo-Saxon Amulets and Curing Stones

Anglo-Saxon Amulets and Curing Stones is an archaeological study of amulets, talismans and curing stones in the burial record of Anglo-Saxon England.

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Anglo-Saxon art

Anglo-Saxon art covers art produced within the Anglo-Saxon period of English history, beginning with the Migration period style that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from the continent in the 5th century, and ending in 1066 with the Norman Conquest of a large Anglo-Saxon nation-state whose sophisticated art was influential in much of northern Europe.

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Anglo-Saxon Deviant Burial Customs

Anglo-Saxon Deviant Burial Customs is an archaeological study of atypical burial practices in Anglo-Saxon England.

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Anglo-Saxon paganism

Anglo-Saxon paganism, sometimes termed Anglo-Saxon heathenism, Anglo-Saxon pre-Christian religion, or Anglo-Saxon traditional religion, refers to the religious beliefs and practices followed by the Anglo-Saxons between the 5th and 8th centuries AD, during the initial period of Early Medieval England.

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Anglo-Scandinavian

Anglo-Scandinavian is an academic term referring to the archaeological and historical periods during the 8th to 13th centuries in which there was migration to - and occupation of - the British Isles by Scandinavian peoples generally known as Vikings.

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Angoulême

Angoulême (Poitevin-Saintongeais: Engoulaeme; Engoleime) is a commune, the capital of the Charente department, in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of southwestern France.

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Aniconism in Christianity

Christianity has not generally practised aniconism, or the avoidance or prohibition of types of images, but has had an active tradition of making and venerating images of God and other religious figures.

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Anil's Ghost

Anil’s Ghost is the critically acclaimed fourth novel by Michael Ondaatje.

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Animal, Vegetable, Mineral?

Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? was a popular television game show which ran from 1952 to 1959.

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Ankershagen

Ankershagen is a municipality in the Mecklenburgische Seenplatte district, in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany.

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Ankh-Morpork City Watch

The Ankh-Morpork City Watch is the police force of the fictional city of Ankh-Morpork in the Discworld series by the English writer Terry Pratchett.

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Ann Arbor, Michigan

Ann Arbor is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan and the county seat of Washtenaw County.

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Ann B. Stahl

Ann Brower Stahl is an Africanist archaeologist whose work focuses on the history of the Banda area in Ghana, West Africa.

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Anna Curtenius Roosevelt

Anna Curtenius Roosevelt (born 1946) is an American archaeologist and Professor of Anthropology at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

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Anna Marguerite McCann

Anna Marguerite McCann (May 11, 1933 – February 12, 2017) was an American art historian and archaeologist.

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Anna Maria Bisi

Anna Maria Bisi (1938–1988), known as A. M. Bisi, was an Italian archaeologist and academic, specialising in the Phoenicians and Punics.

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Anna O. Shepard

Anna Osler Shepard (1903-1971) was an American archaeologist whose work was foundational to the study of ancient ceramics in the American Southwest and Mesoamerica.

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Anna Plowden

Anna Bridget Plowden, (18 June 1938 – 21 August 1997) was a British archaeological conservator and restorer.

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Anne and Bernard Spitzer Hall of Human Origins

The Anne and Bernard Spitzer Hall of Human Origins is an exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

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Anne Claude de Caylus

Anne Claude de Tubières-Grimoard de Pestels de Lévis, comte de Caylus, marquis d'Esternay, baron de Bransac (Anne Claude Philippe; October 31, 1692September 5, 1765), French antiquarian, proto-archaeologist and man of letters, was born in Paris.

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Anne Johnson

Anne Johnson, a British archaeologist and historical researcher, is a specialist in the archaeology of Roman forts of the early empire in Britain and the German Provinces.

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Anne Macaulay

Anne Macaulay (11 March 1924 – 1998) was a British musicologist, author and lecturer.

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Anne Stine Ingstad

Anne Stine Ingstad (11 February 1918 – 6 November 1997) was a Norwegian archaeologist who, along with her husband Helge Ingstad, discovered the remains of a Viking (Norse) settlement at L'Anse aux Meadows in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador in 1960.

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Anne Strachan Robertson

Professor Anne Strachan Robertson FRSE FSA FSA Scot FNA DLitt (3 May 1910 – 4 October 1997) was an archaeologist, numismatist and writer, who was a professor of archaeology at the University of Glasgow and a keeper of coin collections at the Hunterian Museum.

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Annette Laming-Emperaire

Annette Laming-Emperaire (22 October 1917 – May 1977) was a French archeologist.

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Annibale degli Abati Olivieri

Annibale degli Abati Olivieri (17 June 1708 – 29 September 1789) was an Italian archaeologist, numismatist and librarian, considered the founder of the Biblioteca Oliveriana, Pesaro.

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Annie Bélis

Annie Bélis is a French archaeologist, philologist, papyrologist and musician.

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Annie Smith Peck

Annie Smith Peck (October 19, 1850 – July 18, 1935) was an American mountaineer and adventurer.

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Annual Review of Anthropology

The Annual Review of Anthropology is an annual peer-reviewed academic journal that was established in 1972.

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Anoeschka von Meck

Anoeschka von Meck (born 1967) is a Namibian author who writes in the Afrikaans language.

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Anson Rainey

Anson Frank Rainey (January 11, 1930 – February 19, 2011) was Professor Emeritus of Ancient Near Eastern Cultures and Semitic Linguistics at Tel Aviv University.

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Answers in Genesis

Answers in Genesis (AiG) is a fundamentalist Christian apologetics parachurch organization.

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Antakya

Antakya (انطاكيا, Anṭākyā, previously أنطاكيّة (Anṭākīyyah) from ܐܢܛܝܘܟܝܐ, Anṭiokia; Ἀντιόχεια, Antiócheia) is the seat of the Hatay Province in southern Turkey.

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Antalya Museum

The Antalya Museum or Antalya Archeological Museum (Antalya Müzesi) is one of Turkey's largest museums, located in Konyaaltı, Antalya.

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Antártica Chilena Province

Antártica Chilena Province (Provincia de la Antártica Chilena) is the southernmost and one of four provinces in Chile's southernmost region, Magallanes and Antártica Chilena Region (XII).

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António Rodrigo Pinto da Silva

António Rodrigo Pinto da Silva (Porto, March 13, 1912 – Lisbon, September 28, 1992), often referred to as A.R. Pinto da Silva or P. Silva, was a Portuguese botanist who distinguished himself as a taxonomist and phytosociologist when he collaborated with Swiss botanist Josias Braun-Blanquet and also with Pierre Dansereau.

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Antelope Island State Park

Antelope Island State Park is a Utah state park on Antelope Island in the Great Salt Lake.

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Antequera

Antequera is a city and municipality in the Comarca de Antequera, province of Málaga, part of the Spanish autonomous community of Andalusia.

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Anthelme Trimolet

Anthelme Claude Honoré Trimolet (8 May 1798, Lyon - 17 December 1866, Lyon) was a French painter; notable for portraits and interiors with figures.

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Anthonia Fatunsin

Anthonia Kehinde Fatunsin is a Nigerian archaeologist.

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Anthony Birley

Anthony Richard Birley (born 8 October 1937) is a British ancient historian, archaeologist and academic.

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Anthony Giddens

Anthony Giddens, Baron Giddens (born 18 January 1938) is a British sociologist who is known for his theory of structuration and his holistic view of modern societies.

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Anthony Legge

Professor Anthony James Legge (6 June 1939 – 4 February 2013).

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Anthony Snodgrass

Anthony McElrea Snodgrass FBA (born 7 July 1934) is an academic and archaeologist noted for his work on Archaic Greece.

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Anthropic units

The phrase anthropic units (from Greek anthropos meaning man) is used with different meanings in archaeology, in mensuration and in social studies.

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Anthropogeny

Anthropogeny is the study of human origins.

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Anthropological Index Online

The Anthropological Index Online is an academic journal indexing service for anthropology.

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Anthropological Literature

Anthropological Literature (AL) is an online database of citations to journal articles and articles in edited volumes and symposia held by the Tozzer Library (previously the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology), the anthropology library at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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Anthropological Society of South Australia

The Anthropological Society of South Australia was established in 1926 with the aim to promote the study of anthropology, archaeology and other related disciplines.

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Anthropologist

An anthropologist is a person engaged in the practice of anthropology.

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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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Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines of Central and Northern Europe

Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines, sometimes called pole gods, have been found at many archaeological sites in Central and Northern Europe.

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Anthropomorphism

Anthropomorphism is the attribution of human traits, emotions, or intentions to non-human entities.

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Anthropopithecus

The terms Anthropopithecus (Blainville, 1839) and Pithecanthropus (Haeckel, 1868) are obsolete taxa describing either chimpanzees or archaic humans.

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Anti-frogman techniques

Anti-frogman techniques are security methods developed to protect watercraft, ports and installations, and other sensitive resources both in or nearby vulnerable waterways from potential threats or intrusions by frogmen or other divers.

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Antikythera mechanism

The Antikythera mechanism is an ancient Greek analogue computer and orrery used to predict astronomical positions and eclipses for calendar and astrological purposes decades in advance.

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Antiquarian

An antiquarian or antiquary (from the Latin: antiquarius, meaning pertaining to ancient times) is an aficionado or student of antiquities or things of the past.

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Antiquarische Gesellschaft in Zürich

The Antiquarische Gesellschaft in Zürich (Antiquarian Society of Zürich), often shortened to Antiquarische or AGZ, is an association concerned with the study and preservation of the history of the canton of Zürich.

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Antique Temple

The Antique Temple is a small round temple in the west part of Sanssouci Park in Potsdam.

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Antiquities

Antiquities are objects from antiquity, especially the civilizations of the Mediterranean: the Classical antiquity of Greece and Rome, Ancient Egypt and the other Ancient Near Eastern cultures.

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Antiquities Advisory Board

The Antiquities Advisory Board is a statutory body of the Government of Hong Kong created in 1976 to evaluate old buildings in Hong Kong, and to recommend those with historical or architectural merit for listing as monuments.

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Antiquities trade

The antiquities trade is the exchange of antiquities and archaeological artifacts from around the world.

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Antiquity (journal)

Antiquity is an academic journal dedicated to the subject of archaeology.

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Antoine Galland

Antoine Galland (4 April 1646 – 17 February 1715) was a French orientalist and archaeologist, most famous as the first European translator of One Thousand and One Nights which he called Les mille et une nuits.

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Antoine Guillaumont

Antoine Guillaumont (13 January 1915, L'Arbresle – 25 August 2000) was a French archaeologist and Syriac scholar.

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Antonia Arslan

Antonia Arslan (Անտոնիա Արսլան, born 1938) is an Italian writer and academic of Armenian origin.

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Antonia Fortress

The Antonia Fortress (Aramaic:קצטרא דאנטוניה) was a military barracks built over the Hasmonean Baris by Herod the Great.

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Antonio Annetto Caruana

Antonio Annetto Caruana (14 May 1830 – 3 March 1905), also known as A. A. Caruana, was a Maltese archaeologist and author.

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Antonio Bielsa Alegre

Antonio Bielsa Alegre (1929–2008) was an Aragonese archaeologist born in Calanda in the Spanish comarca of Bajo Aragón.

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Antonio Bosio

Antonio Bosio (c. 1575 or 1576 – 1629) was an Italian scholar, the first systematic explorer of subterranean Rome (the "Columbus of the Catacombs"), author of Roma Sotterranea and first urban spelunker.

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Antonio de Morga

Antonio de Morga Sánchez Garay (1559 – July 21, 1636) was a Spanish lawyer and a high-ranking colonial official for 43 years, in the Philippines (1594 to 1604), New Spain and Peru, where he was president of the Audiencia for 20 years.

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Antonio J. Waring Jr.

Antonio Johnston Waring Jr. (August 17, 1915 – March 21, 1964), was an amateur archaeologist who made significant contributions to the study of pre-historic southeastern Georgia.

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Antonio Nibby

Antonio Nibby (October 4, 1792 at Amatrice – December 29, 1839 at Rome) was an Italian archaeologist and topographer.

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Antonio Solalinde

Antonio García de Solalinde (28 December 1892 in Toro (Spain) – 13 July 1937 in Madison, Wisconsin) was a writer, professor and philologist born in the town of Toro in Spain.

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Antonio Taramelli

Antonio Taramelli (Udine, November 14, 1868 - Rome, May 7, 1939) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Anvar Chingizoglu

Anvar Chingizoglu (Ənvər Çingizoğlu; born May 10, 1962) is an Azerbaijani historian, ethnologist and genealogist who mostly specialized in the history and genealogies of medieval Azerbaijan, Iran and the Ottoman Empire.

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Anveshitha

Anveshitha is an Indian horror, supernatural drama, mystery-thriller television serial written by and directed by under the pseudonym Pradyumna.

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Anzac biscuit

An Anzac biscuit is a sweet biscuit, popular in Australia and New Zealand, made using rolled oats, flour, sugar, butter (or margarine), golden syrup, baking soda, boiling water, and (optionally) desiccated coconut.

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Anzick Clovis burial

The Anzick Site (24PA506) in Park County, Montana, United States, is the only known Clovis burial site in the New World.

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Aodh Buidhe Mac an Bhaird

Aodh Buidhe Mac an Bhaird, O.F.M. (aka Aedh Buidh Mac an Bhaird or Hugh Ward; c.1593 – 8 November 1635), was an Irish Franciscan friar who was a noted poet, historian and hagiographer.

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Apahida necropolis

The Apahida necropolis is an archeological site in Apahida, Romania.

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Apazzu

Apazzu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Apishapa culture

The Apishapa culture, or Apishapa Phase, a prehistoric culture from 1000-1400, was named based upon an archaeological site in the Lower Apishapa canyon in Colorado.

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Apocalypto

Apocalypto is a 2006 American epic adventure film directed and produced by Mel Gibson and written by Gibson and Farhad Safinia.

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Apollo 11 Cave

The Apollo 11 Cave is an archeological site in the ǁKaras Region of south-western Namibia, approximately southwest of Keetmanshoop.

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Apollo Belvedere

The Apollo Belvedere or Apollo of the Belvedere—also called the Pythian Apollo—is a celebrated marble sculpture from Classical Antiquity.

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Apollo of Cyrene

The Apollo of Cyrene is a colossal Roman statue of Apollo found at the ancient city of Cyrene, Libya.

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Appietto

Appietto is a commune in the Corse-du-Sud department of France on the island of Corsica.

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Apple River Fort

Apple River Fort, today known as the Apple River Fort State Historic Site, was one of many frontier forts hastily completed by settlers in northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin following the onset of the 1832 Black Hawk War.

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Applied anthropology

Applied anthropology refers to the application of the method and theory of anthropology to the analysis and solution of practical problems.

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Approaching Science

Approaching Science (Chinese: 走近科学; Pinyin: Zǒujìn Kēxué) is a documentary film program of China's CCTV-10.

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April 5

No description.

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April O'Neil

April O'Neil is a fictional character from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics.

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Aq Kupruk

Aq Kupruk is a village in Balkh Province in northern Afghanistan.

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Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority

The Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA) is the financially and administratively autonomous institution responsible for the management, regulation, and the development of the Aqaba Special Economic Zone (ASEZ).

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Aquila (children's magazine)

≥ Aquila is an educational children's magazine that offers an alternative to mainstream publications.

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Aquilla Smith

Aquilla Smith (28 April 1806 – 23 March 1890) was a highly regarded medical doctor, numismatist and archaeologist.

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Aquitaine Basin

The Aquitaine Basin is, after the Paris Basin, the second largest Mesozoic and Cenozoic sedimentary basin in France, occupying a large part of the country's southwestern quadrant.

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Arab Agricultural Revolution

The Arab Agricultural Revolution is the transformation in agriculture from the 8th to the 13th century in the Islamic region of the Old World.

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Arab studies

Arab studies or Arabic studies is an academic discipline centered on the study of Arabs and Arab World.

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Arabian horse

The Arabian or Arab horse (الحصان العربي, DMG ḥiṣān ʿarabī) is a breed of horse that originated on the Arabian Peninsula.

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Arabian Peninsula

The Arabian Peninsula, simplified Arabia (شِبْهُ الْجَزِيرَةِ الْعَرَبِيَّة, ‘Arabian island’ or جَزِيرَةُ الْعَرَب, ‘Island of the Arabs’), is a peninsula of Western Asia situated northeast of Africa on the Arabian plate.

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Arabic epic literature

Arabic epic literature encompasses epic poetry and epic fantasy in Arabic literature.

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Arabic literature

Arabic literature (الأدب العربي / ALA-LC: al-Adab al-‘Arabī) is the writing, both prose and poetry, produced by writers in the Arabic language.

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Aragalur

Aragalur ("six moat place") is a village in Salem district, Tamil Nadu, India.

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Araghju

Araghju is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Araguina-Sennola

Araguina-Sennola is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Aransas Bay

Aransas Bay is a bay on the Texas gulf coast, approximately northeast of Corpus Christi, and south of San Antonio.

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Aratta

Aratta is a land that appears in Sumerian myths surrounding Enmerkar and Lugalbanda, two early and possibly mythical kings of Uruk also mentioned on the Sumerian king list.

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Arbuthnott

Arbuthnott is a small village in northeast Scotland, 26 miles south of Aberdeen.

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Arch of Galerius and Rotunda

The Arch of Galerius (Gr.: Αψίδα του Γαλερίου) or Kamara (Gr.: Καμάρα) and the Rotunda (Ροτόντα) are neighbouring early 4th-century AD monuments in the city of Thessaloniki, in the region of Central Macedonia in northern Greece.

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Arch-shaped Religious Architectural Complex

Archaeological excavations discovered this colonnade with pointed arches north of the Maiden Tower in 1964.

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Archaeobiology

Archaeobiology, the study of the biology of ancient times through archaeological materials, is a subspecialty of archaeology.

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Archaeocryptography

Archaeocryptography (from Greek ἀρχαῖος, arkhaios, "ancient" and κρυπτός (kruptós), "hidden, secret"; and γράφειν (graphein), "to write") is the study of decoding a monument or structure by determining the underlying mathematical order beneath the proportions, size, and placement to find any re-occurring or unusual data in respect to that which is being studied, or within another monument or structure.

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Archaeogaming

Archaeogaming is an archaeological framework which, broadly speaking, includes the study of archaeology in and of video-games as well as the use of video-games for archaeological purposes.

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Archaeologia Cambrensis

Archaeologia Cambrensis is an archaeological and historical scholarly journal that is published annually by the Cambrian Archaeological Association.

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Archaeologia Polona

Archaeologia Polona is an academic journal of archaeology published in English annually since 1958 by the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences.

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Archaeological forgery

Archaeological forgery is the manufacture of supposedly ancient items that are sold to the antiquities market and may even end up in the collections of museums.

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Archaeological illustration

Archaeological Illustration is a form of technical illustration that records material derived from an archaeological context graphically.

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Archaeological Institute of America

The Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) is a North American nonprofit organization devoted to the promotion of public interest in archaeology, and the preservation of archaeological sites.

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Archaeological Museum in Zagreb

The Archaeological Museum (Arheološki muzej u Zagrebu) in Zagreb, Croatia is an archaeological museum with over 450,000 varied artifacts and monuments, gathered from various sources but mostly from Croatia and in particular from the surroundings of Zagreb.

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Archaeological Museum of Arta

The Archaeological Museum of Arta is a museum in Arta, Greece.

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Archaeological Museum of Cherchell

The Archaeological Museum of Cherchell is an archaeological museum located in the center of the seaport town of Cherchell in Tipaza Province, Algeria.

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Archaeological Museum of Chora

The Archaeological Museum of Chora is a museum in Chora, Messenia, in southern Greece, whose collections focus on the Mycenaean civilization, particularly from the excavations at the Palace of Nestor and other regions of Messenia.

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Archaeological Museum of Manisa

Archeological Museum of Manisa is an archeological museum within the Manisa Museum, situated in the historic kulliye of Muradiye Mosque.

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Archaeological Museum of Savona

The Archaeological Museum of Savona (Museo storico archeologico di Savona) is located in Palazzo della Loggia inside the Priamar Fortress.

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Archaeological open-air museum

An archaeological open-air museum is a non-profit permanent institution with outdoor true-to-scale architectural reconstructions primarily based on archaeological sources.

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Archaeological record

The archaeological record is the body of physical (not written) evidence about the past.

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Archaeological Recording Kit

Archaeological Recording Kit (ARK) is a web-based, open source software package for recording and disseminating archaeological data.

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Archaeological Review from Cambridge

The Archaeological Review from Cambridge (ARC) is a biannual academic journal of archaeology.

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Archaeological science

Archaeological science, also known as archaeometry, consists of the application of scientific techniques to the analysis of archaeological materials, to assist in dating the materials.

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Archaeological Seminars

Archaeological Seminars Institute is a private company based in Jerusalem, Israel that deals with archaeology and tourism.

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Archaeological site

An archaeological site is a place (or group of physical sites) in which evidence of past activity is preserved (either prehistoric or historic or contemporary), and which has been, or may be, investigated using the discipline of archaeology and represents a part of the archaeological record.

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Archaeological sites in the District of Mitrovica

The strategic position of the region of Mitrovica in the middle of two great rivers Ibar and Sitnica and its mineral wealth in Albanik (Monte Argentarum), made this location populated since prehistoric period.

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Archaeological Society of Slovenia

The Archaeological Society of Slovenia is a non-governmental organization that unites Slovene archaeologists on a voluntary basis.

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Archaeological Survey of India

The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) is a Government of India (Ministry of Culture) organisation responsible for archaeological research and the conservation and preservation of cultural monuments in the country.

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Archaeological theory

Archaeological theory refers to the various intellectual frameworks through which archaeologists interpret archaeological data.

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Archaeological tourism

Archaeotourism or Archaeological tourism is a form of cultural tourism, which aims to promote public interest in archaeology and the conservation of historical sites.

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Archaeology (disambiguation)

Archaeology is the study of ancient cultures through examination of the artifacts they left behind.

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Archaeology and the Book of Mormon

Since the publication of the Book of Mormon in 1830, Mormon archaeologists have attempted to find archaeological evidence to support it.

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Archaeology Awards

The Archaeology Awards is an annual awards ceremony celebrating achievements in the field of archaeology.

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Archaeology awareness playing cards

The archaeology awareness playing cards are a set of playing cards developed by the United States Department of Defense designed to educate members of the United States military serving in Iraq and Afghanistan about the importance of respecting ancient monuments, to try to preserve the Iraqi and Afghan national cultural heritage.

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Archaeology Data Service

The Archaeology Data Service (ADS) is an open access digital archive for archaeological research outputs.

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Archaeology in India

Archaeology in India is mainly done under the supervision of Archaeological Survey of India.

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Archaeology in Oceania

Archaeology in Oceania is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal covering prehistoric and historic archaeology, especially concerning Australia, the islands of the Pacific Ocean, and the western Pacific Rim.

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Archaeology in Saskatchewan

Archaeology in Saskatchewan, Canada, is supported by professional and amateur interest, privately funded and not-for-profit organizations, and governmental and citizen co-operation with the primary incentive to encourage archaeological awareness and interest in the heritage that defines the province to this date.

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Archaeology in Singapore

Archaeology in Singapore is a niche discipline.

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Archaeology Museum, Pasca

The Archaeology Museum of Pasca (Museo Arqueológico de Pasca) is an archaeological museum located in Pasca, Colombia.

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Archaeology Museum, Sogamoso

The Archaeology Museum of Sogamoso is a museum on the archaeological findings in the area of sacred City of the Sun Sogamoso, Boyacá, Colombia.

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Archaeology of Denmark

The Archaeology of Denmark presents an extraordinary rich and varied abundance of archaeological artifacts, exceptionally preserved by the climate and natural conditions in Denmark proper – including boglands, shallow waters, a cold and relatively unvarying climate.

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Archaeology of Ferizaj

Kosovo has a very valuable asset of archaeology but a handicap in this field are still institutional serious researches.

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Archaeology of Indonesia

The archaeology of Indonesia is the study of the archaeology of the archipelagic realm that today forms the nation of Indonesia, stretching from prehistory through almost two millennia of documented history.

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Archaeology of Israel

The archaeology of Israel is the study of the archaeology of the present-day Israel, stretching from prehistory through three millennia of documented history.

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Archaeology of Kosovo

Archaeology of Kosovo as a field of study and research was started in the second half of the 20th century.

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Archaeology of Lebanon

Archaeology of Lebanon reveals thousands of years of history ranging from the Lower Palaeolithic, Phoenician, Jewish, Roman, Muslim, Christian, Ottoman, and Crusades history.

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Archaeology of Northern Europe

The archaeology of Northern Europe studies the prehistory of Scandinavia and the adjacent North European Plain, roughly corresponding to the territories of modern Sweden, Norway, Denmark, northern Germany, Poland and the Netherlands.

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Archaeology of Porac, Pampanga

Porac, Pampanga contains areas in and near Babo Balukbuk in Porac that have strong indication of human habitation, according to investigations published on the University of the Philippines Archaeological Studies Program website.

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Archaeology of religion and ritual

The archaeology of religion and ritual is a growing field of study within archaeology that applies ideas from religious studies, theory and methods, anthropological theory, and archaeological and historical methods and theories to the study of religion and ritual in past human societies from a material perspective.

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Archaeology of shipwrecks

The archaeology of shipwrecks is the field of Archaeology specialized most commonly in the study and exploration of shipwrecks.

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Archaeology of Svalbard

The archaeology of Svalbard is the study of human activity in the northerly Arctic Ocean archipelago's past.

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Archaeology of the Americas

The archaeology of the Americas is the study of the archaeology of North America (Mesoamerica included), Central America, South America and the Caribbean.

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Archaeology of the Philippines

The archaeology of the Philippines is the study of past societies in the territory of the modern Republic of the Philippines, an island country in Southeast Asia, through material culture.

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Archaeology of the Romani people

Archaeology of the Romani people refers to the science of archaeology as applied in relation to the Romani people, an ethnic group dispersed across the world, which is known under several different names.

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Archaeology of trade

The archaeology of trade and exchange is a sub-discipline of archaeology that identifies how material goods and ideas moved across human populations.

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Archaeology Scotland

Archaeology Scotland, formerly known as the Council for Scottish Archaeology (CSA) is a membership organisation which seeks to promote the understanding of archaeology in Scotland.

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Archaeology South-East

Archaeology South-East (ASE) is a large contracts division in southern England which provides professional archaeological services for public and private sector clients.

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Archaeometallurgy

Archaeometallurgy is the study of the history and prehistoric use and production of metals by humans.

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Archaeomythology

Archaeomythology refers to the study of archaeology through the discipline of mythology.

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Archaeoparasitology

Archaeoparasitology, a multi-disciplinary field within paleopathology, is the study of parasites in archaeological contexts.

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Archaeopress

Archaeopress is a publisher of archaeological books, based in Oxford, England.

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Archanes

Archanes (Αρχάνες, Godart & Olivier abbreviation: ARKH) is a former municipality in the Heraklion regional unit, Crete, Greece.

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Archäologisches Museum Hamburg

The (Hamburg Archaeological Museum; formerly the) is an archaeological museum in the Harburg borough of Hamburg, Germany.

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Archdeacon Newton

Archdeacon Newton is a hamlet and rural parish of several farms in the borough of Darlington and the ceremonial county of County Durham, in England.

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Archeo (magazine)

Archeo is a monthly archeology magazine based in Rome, Italy.

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Archeogeography

Archeogeography is an academic discipline that deals with the dynamics of space over time and helps to explore other dimensions of geohistorical objects that have been made so far by the disciplines of historical geography, the geo-history and archaeology of the landscape or the environment.

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Archeologia Medievale

Archeologia Medievale is a peer-reviewed academic journal of post-classical archaeology and the history of material culture in the pre-industrial age.

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Archeologia Viva

Archeologia Viva (meaning Archaeology Alive in English) is an Italian language magazine concerning archeology.

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Archeological Map of Egypt

The Archeological Map of Egypt is an archeological Geographical Information System (GIS) documenting Egyptian archaeological sites at the national, site, and monument levels.

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Archeological Society of Virginia

The Archeological Society of Virginia is a non-profit organization that focuses on archaeological projects in Virginia for over 50 years.

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Archipelago Sea

The Archipelago Sea (Finnish: Saaristomeri, Swedish: Skärgårdshavet) is a part of the Baltic Sea between the Gulf of Bothnia, the Gulf of Finland and the Sea of Åland, within Finnish territorial waters.

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Architectural historian

An architectural historian is a person who studies and writes about the history of architecture, and is regarded as an authority on it.

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Architecture of Aylesbury

The architecture of Aylesbury, the county town of Buckinghamshire, reflects the ordinary architecture which can be found in many small towns in England where the buildings of the town were designed by local architects.

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Architecture of Lebanon

The architecture of Lebanon embodies the historical, cultural and religious influences that have shaped Lebanon's built environment.

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Architecture of Mesopotamia

The architecture of Mesopotamia is ancient architecture of the region of the Tigris–Euphrates river system (also known as Mesopotamia), encompassing several distinct cultures and spanning a period from the 10th millennium BC, when the first permanent structures were built, to the 6th century BC.

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Architecture of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture

The chalcolithic Cucuteni-Trypillia culture, in Eastern Europe, left behind thousands of settlement ruins, circa 6000 to 3500 BC, containing a wealth of archaeological artifacts attesting to their cultural and technological characteristics.

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Archival research

Archival research is a type of primary research which involves seeking out and extracting evidence from original archival records.

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Arcisse de Caumont

Arcisse de Caumont (20 August 1801, Bayeux – 16 April 1873) was a French historian and archaeologist.

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Arctic Anthropology

Arctic Anthropology is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering research on the archaeology, ethnology, and physical anthropology of arctic and subarctic peoples.

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Ard Tlaili

Ard Tlaili or Tell Ard Tlaili is a small tell mound archaeological site in a plain at the foot of the Lebanon Mountains northwest of Baalbeck, in the Beqaa Valley in Lebanon.

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Ardashir I

Ardashir I or Ardeshir I (Middle Persian:, New Persian: اردشیر بابکان, Ardashir-e Bābakān), also known as Ardashir the Unifier (180–242 AD), was the founder of the Sasanian Empire.

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Are You My Mummy?

"Are You My Mummy?" is the twelfth broadcast episode of the animated television series Phineas and Ferb. The episode sees stepbrothers Phineas and Ferb going to an Egyptian-themed theater where they become inspired to befriend a mummy they believe is being kept in the theater basement.

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Area of archaeological potential

Areas of archaeological potential and other terms such as area of high archaeological potential or urban archaeological zone are terms used to identify parts of the country where it is known that buried archaeology is likely to survive.

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Area of Critical Environmental Concern

Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) is a conservation ecology program in the Western United States, managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

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Aregund

Aregund, Aregunda, Arnegund, Aregonda, or Arnegonda (c. 515/520–580) was a Frankish queen, the wife of Clotaire I, king of the Franks, and the mother of Chilperic I of Neustria.

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Arganda del Rey

Arganda del Rey is a municipality in the autonomous community of Madrid in central Spain.

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Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team

The Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team (Equipo Argentino de Antropología Forense, or "EAAF") is an Argentine not-for-profit scientific non-governmental organisation.

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Ariodante Fabretti

Ariodante Fabretti (1 October 1816 – 15 September 1894) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Aris Poulianos

Aris Poulianos (born on July 24, 1924, in Ikaria) is a Greek anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Aristides Carlos Rodrigues Museum

The Aristides Carlos Rodrigues Museum is located at Avenue Pereira Rego, 1000, in the town of Candelária, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

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Aristocracy of Norway

Aristocracy of Norway refers to modern and medieval aristocracy in Norway.

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Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

The Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (A.U.Th.; often called the Aristotelian University or University of Thessaloniki; Αριστοτέλειο Πανεπιστήμιο Θεσσαλονίκης) is the sixth oldest and among the most highly ranked tertiary education institutions in Greece.

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Arizona State Museum

The Arizona State Museum (ASM), founded in 1893, was originally a repository for the collection and protection of archaeological resources.

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Arkansas Post

The Arkansas Post was the first European settlement in the lower Mississippi River Valley and present-day Arkansas when Henri de Tonti established it in 1686 as a French trading post on the banks of the lower Arkansas River.

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Arlen F. Chase

Arlen F. Chase (born 1953) is a Mesoamerican archaeologist and is faculty member in the anthropology department at the.

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Arm of Kannon

Arm of Kannon, originally titled in Japan, is a manga by.

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Armagh County Museum

The Armagh County Museum is a museum in Armagh, County Armagh, Northern Ireland.

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Armenian wine

Armenian wine is wine made in Armenia, in the region of South Caucasus.

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Armenians in India

The association of Armenians with India and the presence of Armenians in India are very old, and there has been a mutual economic and cultural association of Armenians with India for the last several centuries.

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Arminius

Arminius (German: Hermann; 18/17 BC – AD 21) was a chieftain of the Germanic Cherusci tribe who famously led an allied coalition of Germanic tribes to a decisive victory against three Roman legions in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 AD.

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Armsheim

Armsheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Army Museum of Toledo

The Museum of the Army (Spanish: Museo del Ejército) is a mid-level museum located in Toledo, Spain.

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Arne Koets

Arne Koets is a historical European martial arts practitioner and instructor from the Netherlands.

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Arnold Brackman

Arnold Charles Brackman (March 6, 1923 – November 21, 1983) was an American journalist and author.

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Arnold Davidson

Arnold Ira Davidson (born 1955) is Robert O. Anderson Distinguished Service Professor in Philosophy, Comparative Literature, History of Science, and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Chicago.

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Arrested development

The term "arrested development" has had multiple meanings for over 200 years.

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Arroyo Hondo Pueblo

Arroyo Hondo Pueblo was a pueblo in the upper Rio Grande valley, New Mexico.

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Arsenical bronze

Arsenical bronze is an alloy in which arsenic, as opposed to or in addition to tin or other constituent metals, is added to copper to make bronze.

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Arslan Eyce Private Amphora Museum

Arslan Eyce Private Amphora Museum, also known as Taşucu Amphora Museum, (Arslan Eyce Özel Amphora Müzesi) is a maritime archaeology museum dedicated to amphora in Taşucu, southern Turkey.

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Art & Architecture Thesaurus

The Art & Architecture Thesaurus (AAT) is a controlled vocabulary used for describing items of art, architecture, and material culture.

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Art forgery

Art forgery is the creating and selling of works of art which are falsely credited to other, usually more famous artists.

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Artà

Artà is one of the 53 independent municipalities on the Spanish Balearic island of Majorca.

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Artemiy Artsikhovsky

Artemiy Artsikhovsky (Артемий Владимирович Арциховский) (December 26 (December 13, O.S.), 1902 — February 17, 1978) was a Russian archaeologist and historian, professor (since 1937), head of the department of archaeology (since 1939) of the Moscow State University, the discoverer of birch bark manuscripts in Novgorod.

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Artempo

Artempo: Where Time Becomes Art was an encyclopedic art exhibition created for the Palazzo Fortuny, Venice in 2007.

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Arthur Bernard Cook

Arthur Bernard Cook (22 October 1868 in Hampstead – 26 April 1952 in Cambridge) was a British classical scholar, known for work in archaeology and the history of religions.

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Arthur C. Parker

Arthur Caswell Parker (April 5, 1881 – January 1, 1955) was an American archaeologist, historian, folklorist, museologist and noted authority on American Indian culture.

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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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Arthur Demarest

Arthur Andrew Demarest is an American anthropologist and archaeologist, known for his studies of the Maya civilization.

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Arthur Dent

Arthur Philip Dent is a fictional character and the hapless protagonist of the comic science fiction series The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams.

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Arthur Evans

Sir Arthur John Evans (8 July 1851 – 11 July 1941) was an English archaeologist and pioneer in the study of Aegean civilization in the Bronze Age.

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Arthur Frothingham

Arthur Lincoln Frothingham, Jr. (1859 – July 1923) was an early professor of art history at Princeton University and an archaeologist.

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Arthur G. Miller

Arthur G. Miller (born 19 May 1942) is an American art historian, archaeologist and academic.

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Arthur Giry

Jean-Marie-Joseph-Arthur Giry (29 February 184813 November 1899) was a French historian, noted for his studies of France in the Middle Ages.

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Arthur John Strutt

Arthur John Strutt (Chelmsford, 1819 – Rome, 1888), was an English painter, engraver, writer, traveller and archaeologist.

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Arthur Komar

Arthur B. Komar (March 26, 1931 – June 3, 2011) was a theoretical physicist, specializing in general relativity and the search for quantum gravity.

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Arthur Mahler

Arthur Mahler (born August 1, 1871, Prague - died April 5, 1944 in Terezín Ghetto) was a Czech-Austrian archeologist.

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Arthur Milchhöfer

Arthur Alexander Johann Milchhöfer (21 March 1852 – 7 December 1903) was a German archaeologist born in Schirwindt, East Prussia, a village in the easternmost corner of the German Reich.

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Arthur Posnansky

Arthur Posnansky (1873–1946), often called "Arturo", was at various times in his life an engineer, explorer, ship’s navigator, director of a river navigation company, entrepreneur, La Paz city council member, and well known and well respected avocational archaeologist.

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Arthur Raistrick

Arthur Raistrick (1896–1991) was a British geologist, archaeologist, academic, and writer.

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Arthur Rosenberg

Arthur Rosenberg (1889–1943) was a German Marxist historian and writer.

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Arthur Segal (archaeologist)

Professor Dr.

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Arthur Stein (historian)

Arthur Stein (10 June 1871, in Vienna – 15 November 1950, in Prague) was an Austrian-Czech historian and epigrapher.

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Arthur Upham Pope

Arthur Upham Pope (February 7, 1881 – September 3, 1969) was an American expert on Iranian art and the editor of the Survey of Persian Art. He was also a university professor of philosophy and aesthetics, archaeologist, photographer, political activist, museum director and planner, pianist, interior designer, and founder of an international scholarly organization.

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Artibus Asiae

Artibus Asiae is a biannual academic journal specialising in the arts and archaeology of Asia.

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Artifact (archaeology)

An artifact, or artefact (see American and British English spelling differences), is something made or given shape by humans, such as a tool or a work of art, especially an object of archaeological interest.

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Arts of Iran

The arts of Iran are one of the richest art heritages in world history and encompasses many traditional disciplines including architecture, painting, literature, music, weaving, pottery, calligraphy, metalworking and stonemasonry.

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Artsakh University

Artsakh State University is the oldest, largest and by far the most respected university in the Republic of Artsakh.

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Arturo Issel

Arturo Issel (Genoa April 11, 1842 – Genoa November 27, 1922) was an Italian geologist, palaeontologist, malacologist and archaeologist, born in Genoa.

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Arturo Montero

Ismael Arturo Montero García (Mexico City, 1961) is considered a prominent mountaineer and speleologist due to his archaeological researches in high mountains and caves of Mesoamerica.

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Arundel Museum

Arundel Museum is a local museum in the town of Arundel, West Sussex, just inland from the south coast of England.

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Arvidsjaur Municipality

Arvidsjaur Municipality (Arvidsjaurs kommun, Árviesjávrrie gielda) is a municipality in Norrbotten County in northern Sweden.

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Asbjørn Herteig

Asbjørn Herteig (15 February 1919 – 2 October 2006) was a Norwegian archeologist.

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Aschbach, Rhineland-Palatinate

Aschbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Asfur

Asfur (עספור) is an Israeli television series, which is broadcast on the channel HOT3.

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Ashford Green Corridor

Ashford Green Corridor is a green space that runs through the town of Ashford in Kent, England.

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Ashgabat National Museum of History

The Ashgabat National Museum of History is a history museum in Ashgabat, the capital city of Turkmenistan.

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Ashmolean Museum

The Ashmolean Museum (in full the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology) on Beaumont Street, Oxford, England, is the world's first university museum.

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Ashoka

Ashoka (died 232 BCE), or Ashoka the Great, was an Indian emperor of the Maurya Dynasty, who ruled almost all of the Indian subcontinent from to 232 BCE.

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Ashur Mosque

The Ashura Mosque was founded in 1169 by the master Najaf Ashur son of Ibrahim.

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ASI (Archaeological Services Inc.)

ASI (Legal: Archaeological Services Inc.) is the largest private archaeological and cultural heritage consulting company in Ontario, with offices in Toronto and Burlington.

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Asian Cultural Council

The Asian Cultural Council (ACC) (アジアン・カルチュラル・カウンシル; Korean: 아시아 문화 협회) is an American non-profit organization dedicated to promoting cultural exchange between the United States and Asia.

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Asian Perspectives

Asian Perspectives: The Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific is an academic journal covering the history and prehistory of Asia and the Pacific region.

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Asine

Asine (Ἀσίνη) was an ancient Greek city of Argolis.

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Asociația Studenților în Arheologie

Asociația Studenților în Arheologie (Association of Students of Archaeology) (A.S.A.) is a national association of students and student groups based in Romania, founded in 1995.

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Asoke Kumar Bhattacharyya

Asoke Kumar Bhattacharyya (February 1, 1919 – June 11, 2016) was an Indian archaeologist, museologist, art historian and professor of Sanskrit.

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ASPRO chronology

The ASPRO chronology is a nine-period dating system of the ancient Near East used by the Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée for archaeological sites aged between 14,000 and 5,700 BP.

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Asrlar Sadosi Festival of Traditional Culture

"Asrlar Sadosi" (English: "Echo of Centuries") is a festival of traditional Uzbek culture which attracts tens of thousands of local and overseas tourists every year and presents all the diversity of the national traditions and customs, handicrafts and cuisine, unique oral and non-material heritage.

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Assaad Seif

Assaad Seif (born 23 September 1967) is a Lebanese archaeologist and Associate Professor in Archaeology at the Lebanese University.

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Assault of Darkness

Assault of Darkness, also known as Legend of the Bog, is a 2009 Irish horror film by the production company Bog Bodies surrounding local lore in the swamplands outside of Dublin Ireland.

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Assemblage (archaeology)

An assemblage is an archaeological term meaning a group of different artifacts found in association with one another, that is, in the same context.

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Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory

The Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory (Asociación para la Recuperación de la Memoria Histórica or ARMH in Spanish) is a Spanish organization that collects the oral and written testimonies about the White Terror of Francisco Franco and excavates and identifies their bodies that were often dumped in mass graves.

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Association of Black Anthropologists

The Association of Black Anthropologists (ABA) founded in 1975, is an American organization which brings together Black anthropologists with a view to highlighting the history of African Americans, especially in regard to exploitation, oppression and discrimination.

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Association of Environmental Professionals

The Association of Environmental Professionals (AEP) is a California-based non-profit organization of interdisciplinary professionals including environmental science, resource management, environmental planning and other professions contributing to this field.

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Association of Local Government Archaeological Officers

The Association of Local Government Archaeological Officers, or ALGAO, functions as a body to represent archaeologists working for local authorities and national parks in the United Kingdom.

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Association of North American Graduate Programs in the Conservation of Cultural Property

The Association of North American Graduate Programs in the Conservation of Cultural Property (ANAGPIC) is an organization comprising universities located in North America that offer graduate programs in the field of art conservation.

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Astronomical year numbering

Astronomical year numbering is based on AD/CE year numbering, but follows normal decimal integer numbering more strictly.

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Astronomy

Astronomy (from ἀστρονομία) is a natural science that studies celestial objects and phenomena.

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Asuka, Yamato

was the Imperial capital of Japan during the Asuka period (538 – 710 AD), which takes its name from this place.

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At Tiri

At Tiri (طيري) is a village located in the Caza of Bint Jbeil in the Nabatiye Governorate in Lebanon.

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Atapuerca Mountains

The Atapuerca Mountains (Sierra de Atapuerca) is a karstic hill formation near the village of Atapuerca in Castile and León, northern Spain.

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Athanasius Kircher

Athanasius Kircher, S.J. (sometimes erroneously spelled Kirchner; Athanasius Kircherus, 2 May 1602 – 28 November 1680) was a German Jesuit scholar and polymath who published around 40 major works, most notably in the fields of comparative religion, geology, and medicine.

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Athelney

Athelney is located between the villages of Burrowbridge and East Lyng in the Sedgemoor district of Somerset, England.

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Athens

Athens (Αθήνα, Athína; Ἀθῆναι, Athênai) is the capital and largest city of Greece.

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ATLA Religion Database

The ATLA Religion Database (ATLA RDB) is an index of academic journal articles in the area of religion.

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Atlantic Northeast

The Atlantic Northeast is a region of North America, which includes the U.S. states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont, and Maine, as well as the Canadian provinces of Québec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador.

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Atlantic roundhouse

In archaeology, an Atlantic roundhouse is an Iron Age stone building found in the northern and western parts of mainland Scotland, the Northern Isles and the Hebrides.

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Atlin Provincial Park and Recreation Area

Atlin Provincial Park and Recreation Area is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada.

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Attica

Attica (Αττική, Ancient Greek Attikḗ or; or), or the Attic peninsula, is a historical region that encompasses the city of Athens, the capital of present-day Greece.

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Attila

Attila (fl. circa 406–453), frequently called Attila the Hun, was the ruler of the Huns from 434 until his death in March 453.

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Aubrey Burl

Harry Aubrey Woodruff Burl MA, DLitt, PhD, FSA, HonFSA Scot (born September 24, 1926) is a British archaeologist most well known for his studies into megalithic monuments and the nature of prehistoric rituals associated with them.

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Audley's Castle

Audley's Castle is a 15th-century castle located 1 mile (1.6 km) north-east of Strangford, County Down, Northern Ireland, on a rocky height overlooking Strangford Lough.

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Audrey Meaney

Audrey Lilian Meaney (born 1931) is an archaeologist and historian specialising in the study of Anglo-Saxon England.

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Auen, Germany

Auen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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August Eisenlohr

August Adolf Eisenlohr (6 October 1832, Mannheim – 24 February 1902, Heidelberg) was a German Egyptologist.

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August Emil Braun

August or Auguste Emil Braun (April 19, 1809, in Gotha, Germany – September 12, 1856, in Rome) was a German archaeologist.

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August Kalkmann

August Kalkmann (24 March 1853, Hamburg – 19 February 1905, Berlin) was a German classical archaeologist and art historian.

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August Mau

August Mau (15 October 1840 – 6 March 1909) was a prominent German art historian and archaeologist who worked with the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut while studying and classifying the Roman paintings at Pompeii, which was destroyed with the town of Herculaneum by volcanic eruption in 79 AD.

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August Reifferscheid

Karl Wilhelm August Reifferscheid (3 October 1835 – 10 November 1887) was a German archaeologist and classical philologist.

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August Rossbach

August Rossbach (26 August 1823 in Schmalkalden – 23 July 1898) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.

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Auguste Bergy

Reverend Father Auguste Bergy (1873 – 31 August 1955) was a French Jesuit archaeologist known for his work on prehistory in Lebanon.

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Auguste Brizeux

Julien Auguste Pélage Brizeux (12 September 1803 – 3 May 1858) was a French poet.

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Auguste Le Prévost

Auguste Le Prévost (3 June 1787 in Bernay, Eure – 14 July 1859 in La Vaupalière) was a French geologist, philologist, archaeologist and historian.

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Augusto Carlos Teixeira de Aragão

Augusto Carlos Teixeira de Aragão • • • (Lisbon, June 15, 1823 - Lisbon, April 29, 1903) was a Portuguese Army officer, doctor, numismatist, archaeologist and historian.

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Augustus Le Plongeon

Augustus Le Plongeon (May 4, 1826 – December 13, 1908) was a French-American photographer, amateur archeologist, antiquarian and author who studied the pre-Columbian ruins of America, particularly those of the Maya civilization on the northern Yucatán Peninsula.

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Augustus Pitt Rivers

Augustus Henry Lane-Fox Pitt Rivers (14 April 18274 May 1900) was an English officer in the British Army, ethnologist, and archaeologist.

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Aukra

Aukra is a village and municipality in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway.

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Aurel Stein

Sir Marc Aurel Stein, KCIE, FRAS, FBA (Stein Márk Aurél; 26 November 1862 – 26 October 1943) was a Hungarian-born British archaeologist, primarily known for his explorations and archaeological discoveries in Central Asia.

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Austral University of Chile

Austral University of Chile (Universidad Austral de Chile or UACh) is a research university in Chile based in Valdivia although it has some institutions and programs in Puerto Montt.

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Australasian Society for Historical Archaeology

The Australasian Society for Historical Archaeology (ASHA) was founded as the Australian Society for Historical Archaeology in 1970 by Judy Birmingham, then a lecturer at the University of Sydney.

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Australian Academy of the Humanities

The Australian Academy of the Humanities was established by Royal Charter in 1969 to advance scholarship and public interest in the humanities in Australia.

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Australian archaeology

Australian archaeology is a large sub-field in the discipline of archaeology.

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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 Association of Consulting Archaeologists

The Australian Association of Consulting Archaeologist Inc.

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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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Australopithecus

Australopithecus (informal australopithecine or australopith, although the term australopithecine has a broader meaning as a member of the subtribe Australopithecina which includes this genus as well as Paranthropus, Kenyanthropus, Ardipithecus, and Praeanthropus) is an extinct genus of hominins.

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Authentication

Authentication (from authentikos, "real, genuine", from αὐθέντης authentes, "author") is the act of confirming the truth of an attribute of a single piece of data claimed true by an entity.

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Automated mineralogy

Automated mineralogy is a generic term describing a range of analytical solutions, areas of commercial enterprise, and a growing field of scientific research and engineering applications involving largely automated and quantitative analysis of minerals, rocks and man-made materials.

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Auxiliary sciences of history

Auxiliary (or ancillary) sciences of history are scholarly disciplines which help evaluate and use historical sources and are seen as auxiliary for historical research.

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Avebury

Avebury is a Neolithic henge monument containing three stone circles, around the village of Avebury in Wiltshire, in southwest England.

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Avellino eruption

The Avellino eruption of Mount Vesuvius refers to a Plinian-type eruption that occurred in the 2nd millennium BC and is estimated to have had a VEI of 6.

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Avenue (archaeology)

British Archaeologists refine the general archaeological use of avenue to denote a long, parallel-sided strip of land, measuring up to about 30m in width, open at either end and with edges marked by stone or timber alignments and/or a low earth bank and ditch.

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Avenue (landscape)

In landscaping, an avenue, or allée, is traditionally a straight path or road with a line of trees or large shrubs running along each side, which is used, as its Latin source venire ("to come") indicates, to emphasize the "coming to," or arrival at a landscape or architectural feature.

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Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library

The Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library is a library located in Avery Hall on the Morningside Heights campus of Columbia University in the New York City.

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Avguštin Stegenšek

Avguštin Stegenšek Ph. D. (7 July 1875 in Tevče, Laško – 16 March 1920) was a Slovene theologian, philosopher and art historian.

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Avi Gopher

Avi Gopher is an Israeli archaeologist.

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Avraham Biran

Avraham Biran (אברהם בירן, born 23 October 1909 – 16 September 2008) was an Israeli archaeologist, best known for heading excavations at Tel Dan in northern Israel.

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Axe-monies

Axe-monies refer to bronze artifacts found in both western Mesoamerica and the northern Andes.

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Axel W. Persson

Axel Waldemar Persson (June 1, 1888 – May 7, 1951) was a Swedish archaeologist.

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Axlor

Axlor is a prehistoric archeological site in the village of Dima in Biscay in the Autonomous Basque Community of Spain, dating from the Middle Paleolithic or Mousterian period.

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Aydın Province

Aydın Province (Aydın ili) is a province of southwestern Turkey, located in the Aegean Region. The provincial capital is the city of Aydın which has a population of approx. 150,000 (2000). Other towns in the province include the summer seaside resorts of Didim and Kuşadası.

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Aydin Balayev

Aydin Balayev Huseynaga oglu (Aydın Balayev Hüseynağa oğlu; born November 19, 1956) is an Azerbaijani historian, ethnologist and professor.

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Ayolas, Paraguay

Ayolas is a city in the department of Misiones, Paraguay.

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Azar Gat

Azar Gat (born 1959 in Haifa, Israel) is a researcher and author on military history, military strategy and war and peace in general.

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Azariah dei Rossi

Azariah ben Moses dei Rossi (Hebrew: עזריה מן האדומים) was an Italian-Jewish physician and scholar.

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Azilian

The Azilian is a name given by archaeologists to an industry in the Franco-Cantabrian region of northern Spain and southern France.

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Aziz Ab'Sáber

Aziz Nacib Ab'Sáber (October 24, 1924 – March 16, 2012) was an environmentalist and one of Brazil´s most respected scientists, honored with the highest awards of Brazilian science in geography, geology, ecology and archaeology.

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Azra Erhat

Azra Erhat (6 June 1915 – 6 September 1982) was a Turkish author, archaeologist, academician and translator.

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Azrael's Tear

Azrael's Tear is a first-person adventure game published by Mindscape and developed by Intelligent Games.

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Aztalan State Park

Aztalan State Park is a Wisconsin state park in the Town of Aztalan, Jefferson County, at latitude N 43° 4′ and longitude W 88° 52′.

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Aztecs

The Aztecs were a Mesoamerican culture that flourished in central Mexico in the post-classic period from 1300 to 1521.

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Ángela Jeria

Ángela Margarita Jeria Gómez (born 22 August 1926) is a Chilean archaeologist.

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Árbæjarsafn

Árbæjarsafn is the historical museum of the city of Reykjavík as well as an open-air museum and a regional museum.

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Åke Åkerström

Åke Åkerström (April 26, 1902 – October, 1991) was a Swedish archaeologist and classical scholar.

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Çanakkale Archaeological Museum

Çanakkale Archaeological Museum (Çanakkele Arkeoloji Müzesi) is a museum in Çanakkale, Turkey.

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Çeşme Museum

Çeşme Museum is a general interest museum in Çeşme ilçe (district) of İzmir Province, Turkey.

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Çukuriçi Höyük

Çukuriçi Höyük (Turkish: 'Mound in the Valley') is a prehistoric Tell settlement on the Aegean coast of western Turkey.

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Çumra

Çumra is a town and district of Konya Province in the Central Anatolia region of Turkey.

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École Biblique

The École biblique et archéologique française de Jérusalem, commonly known as École Biblique, is a French academic establishment in Jerusalem, founded by Dominicans, and specialising in archaeology and Biblical exegesis.

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École du Louvre

The École du Louvre is an institution of higher education and a French Grande École located in the Aile de Flore of the Louvre Palace in Paris, France.

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École française d'Extrême-Orient

The École française d'Extrême-Orient (French School of the Far East), abbreviated EFEO, is an associated college of PSL University dedicated to the study of Asian societies.

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Édouard Ardaillon

Édouard Muller Ardaillon (born 4 May 1867 at Mazères in Ariège, died 19 September 1926 at Oran in Algeria) was a French historian, archaeologist and geographer.

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Édouard Chavannes

Émmanuel-Édouard Chavannes (5 October 1865 – 29 January 1918) was a French Sinologist and expert on Chinese history and religion, and is best known for his translations of major segments of Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, the work's first ever translation into a Western language.

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Édouard de Barthélemy

Édouard Marie, comte de Barthélemy (21 November 1830, Angers – 30 May 1888, Paris) was a French administrator and historian.

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Édouard Naville

Henri Édouard Naville (14 June 1844 – 17 October 1926) was a Swiss archaeologist, Egyptologist and Biblical scholar.

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Édouard Piette

Édouard Louis Stanislas Piette (11 March 1827, Aubigny-les-Pothées – 5 June 1906, Rumigny) was a French archaeologist and prehistorian.

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Émil Goeldi

Émil August Goeldi (var. Göldi, var. Emílio Augusto Goeldi) (August 28, 1859 – July 5, 1917 in Bern), was a Swiss-Brazilian naturalist and zoologist.

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Émile Amélineau

Émile Amélineau (1850 – 12 January 1915 at Châteaudun) was a French Coptologist, archaeologist and Egyptologist.

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Étienne Aymonier

Étienne François Aymonier (26 February 1844 – 21 January 1929) was a French linguist and explorer.

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Étienne Drioton

Étienne Marie Felix Drioton (21 November 1889 – 17 January 1961) was a French Egyptologist, archaeologist, and Catholic canon.

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Évora

Évora (Ebora) is a city and a municipality in Portugal.

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Ñawpa Pacha

Ñawpa Pacha, Journal of Andean Archaeology is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal published by Taylor & Francis on behalf of the Institute of Andean Studies (Berkeley, California).

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Ödemiş Museum

Ödemiş Museum is a museum in Ödemiş ilçe (district) of İzmir Province, Turkey.

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Ötzi

Ötzi (also called the Iceman, the Similaun Man, the Man from Hauslabjoch, the Tyrolean Iceman, and the Hauslabjoch mummy) is a nickname given to the well-preserved natural mummy of a man who lived between 3400 and 3100 BCE.

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Čapljina

Čapljina is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Đevrske

Đevrske (Ђеврске) is a village located in Kistanje municipality, 10 km southwest of Kistanje, in the continental part of Šibenik-Knin County, Croatia.

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Ġgantija

Ġgantija ("Giants' Tower") is a megalithic temple complex from the Neolithic on the Mediterranean island of Gozo.

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Ħaġar Qim

Ħaġar Qim ("Standing/Worshipping Stones") is a megalithic temple complex found on the Mediterranean island of Malta, dating from the Ġgantija phase (3600-3200 BC).

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İçel Sanat Kulübü

Art Club of İçel (İçel Sanat Kulübü) is a nonprofit cultural organization in Mersin, Turkey.

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İstanbul Archaeology Museums

The Istanbul Archaeology Museums (İstanbul Arkeoloji Müzeleri) is a group of three archeological museums located in the Eminönü district of Istanbul, Turkey, near Gülhane Park and Topkapı Palace.

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İzmir Archaeological Museum

The Izmir Archeology Museum (İzmir Arkeoloji Müzesi) is an archeology museum in Izmir, Turkey, containing a number of artifacts from around the Gulf of Izmir.

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Łucja Okulicz-Kozaryn

Łucja Okulicz-Kozaryn (5 January 1933 - 1999) was a Polish academic and archaeologist specialising in history of Old Prussians.

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Şanlıurfa Archaeology and Mosaic Museum

Şanlıurfa Archaeology and Mosaic Museum is a museum in Şanlıurfa (also known as Urfa), Turkey.

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Şevket Aziz Kansu

Şevket Aziz Kansu (1903, Edirne–1983, Ankara) was a Turkish physician and academic.

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Šilentabor

Šilentabor is a small settlement north of Zagorje in the Municipality of Pivka in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia.

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Żejtun Roman villa

The Żejtun Roman villa is an archaeological complex in the city of Żejtun, in south-eastern Malta.

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Żnin

Żnin (Znin, 1941-45: Dietfurt) is a small town in Poland with a population of 14,181 (June 2014).

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Življenje in tehnika

Življenje in tehnika (Life & Technology) is a Slovene-language monthly magazine about popular science.

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B&B Complex fires

The B&B Complex fires were a linked pair of wildfires that together burned of Oregon forest during the summer of 2003.

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B. B. Lal

Braj Basi Lal (born 2 May 1921), better known as B. B. Lal, is an Indian archaeologist.

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B. Calvin Jones

B.

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B. H. St. John O'Neill

Bryan Hugh St.

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Ba (pharaoh)

Ba, also known as Horus Ba, is the serekh-name of an early Egyptian or ancient Egyptian king who may have ruled at the end of the 1st dynasty, the latter part of 2nd dynasty or during the 3rd dynasty.

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Baal with Thunderbolt

Baal with Thunderbolt or the Baal stele is a white limestone bas-relief stele from the ancient kingdom of Ugarit in northwestern Syria.

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Baarlo

Baarlo (Baolder) is a town in the southeastern Netherlands.

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Baba Adam's Mosque

Baba Adam’s Mosque is a Jami Mosque situated in the village of Kazi Qasba under Rikabibazar Union in Rampal thana of Munshiganj District in Bangladesh.

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Babatha

Babatha (also known as Babata) was a Jewish woman who lived in the port town of Maoza in modern-day Jordan at beginning of the 2nd century CE.

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Babesch

Babesch, formerly Bulletin Antieke Beschaving is an annual scholarly journal published by Peeters.

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Babington family

Babington is the name of two separate gentry families: one an Anglo-Irish family whose descendants in the male line are still livingBurke's Landed Gentry of Ireland, 1958, 4th Edition by L. G. Pine, Burke's Peerage: 'Babington of Creevagh', pg 42' and the other an English family that is now extinct in the male line.

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Babken Arakelyan

Babken Nikolayi Arakelyan (Բաբկեն Նիկոլայի Առաքելյան; February 1, 1912August 16, 2004) was an Armenian historian and archeologist.

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Babruysk

Babruysk, Babrujsk, or Bobruisk (Бабру́йск, Łacinka: Babrujsk, Бобру́йск, Bobrujsk, באברויסק) is a city in the Mogilev Region of eastern Belarus on the Berezina river.

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Back Harbour

Back Harbour is a Canadian community located on the northern island of Twillingate in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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Bad Berleburg

Bad Berleburg (earlier also Berleburg) is a town, in the district of Siegen-Wittgenstein, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

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Bad Camberg

Bad Camberg is, with 15,000 inhabitants, the second largest town in Limburg-Weilburg district in Hesse, Germany, as well as the southernmost town in the Regierungsbezirk of Gießen.

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Bad Driburg

Bad Driburg is a town and spa in Höxter district in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, pleasantly situated on the Aa and the historic railway Soest-Höxter-Berlin.

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Bad Hersfeld

The festival and spa town of Bad Hersfeld (Bad is "spa" in German; the Old High German name of the city was Herolfisfeld) is the district seat of the Hersfeld-Rotenburg district in northeastern Hesse, Germany, roughly 50 km southeast of Kassel.

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Bad Homburg vor der Höhe

Bad Homburg vor der Höhe is the district town of the Hochtaunuskreis, Hesse, Germany, on the southern slope of the Taunus, bordering among others Frankfurt am Main and Oberursel.

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Bad Kreuznach

Bad Kreuznach is a town in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Bad Wilsnack

Bad Wilsnack is a small town in the Prignitz district, in Brandenburg, Germany.

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Badby

Badby is a village and a rural parish of about in the Daventry district of the county of Northamptonshire, England.

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Baffin Island

Baffin Island (ᕿᑭᖅᑖᓗᒃ, Qikiqtaaluk, Île de Baffin or Terre de Baffin), in the Canadian territory of Nunavut, is the largest island in Canada and the fifth largest island in the world.

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Baffinland Iron Mine

The Baffinland Iron Mines Corporation is working to develop a large open pit iron mine in the Mary River area of Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada.

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Bagnall 0-4-0ST "Alfred" and "Judy"

Alfred and Judy are two four-wheel saddle tank railway steam locomotives.

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Bagsecg

Bagsecg (died 8 January 871), also known as Bacgsecg, was a ninth-century Viking, and one of the first to be recorded by the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.

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Bahadır Alkım

Uluğ Bahadır Alkım (February 28, 1915 – May 6, 1981) was a Turkish archaeologist.

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Bahía Wulaia

Bahia Wulaia is a bay on the western shore of Isla Navarino along the Murray Channel in extreme southern Chile.

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Bahrain National Museum

The Bahrain National Museum (متحف البحرين الوطني, also referred to as National Museum of Bahrain) is the largest and one of the oldest public museums in Bahrain.

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Baikal Archaeology Project

The is an international team of scholars investigating Middle Holocene (about 9000 to 3000 years before present) hunter-gatherers of the Lake Baikal region of Siberia, Russia.

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Balangoda Man

Balangoda Man (Homo sapiens balangodensis) refers to hominins from Sri Lanka's late Quaternary period.

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Balbina Bäbler

Balbina Bäbler (Balbina Bäbler, Glarus, 7 May 1967) is a Swiss archaeologist, specialist on the Northern Black Sea coastal area.

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Balkan Heritage Field School

The Balkan Heritage Field School (BHFS) is an archaeological field school annually providing a number of courses (projects) in archeology, anthropology and history of South-Eastern Europe, documentation, conservation and restoration of historic artifacts and monuments, taught in English and located within Bulgaria and the Republic of Macedonia.

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Balkh Province

Balkh (Pashto and بلخ, Balx) is one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan, located in the north of the country.

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Ballista

The ballista (Latin, from Greek βαλλίστρα ballistra and that from βάλλω ballō, "throw"), plural ballistae, sometimes called bolt thrower, was an ancient missile weapon that launched a large projectile at a distant target.

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Ballyragget

Ballyragget (meaning Mouth of Ragget's Ford) is a small town in County Kilkenny in Ireland.

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Ballyvaughan

Ballyvaughan or Ballyvaghan is a small harbour village in County Clare, Ireland.

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Baltic University

The Baltic University in Exile was established in the displaced persons camps in Germany to educate refugees from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in the aftermath of the Second World War.

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Ban Chiang

Ban Chiang (บ้านเชียง) is an archeological site in Nong Han District, Udon Thani Province, Thailand.

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Banana

A banana is an edible fruit – botanically a berry – produced by several kinds of large herbaceous flowering plants in the genus Musa.

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Banc Ty'nddôl sun-disc

The Banc Ty'nddôl sun-disc is a small, decorated, gold ornament discovered at Cwmystwyth, Ceredigion, Wales.

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Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge

Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge is a U.S. National Wildlife Refuge on Oregon's coast.

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Banff National Park

Banff National Park is Canada's oldest national park and was established in 1885.

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Bangladesh

Bangladesh (বাংলাদেশ, lit. "The country of Bengal"), officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh (গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ), is a country in South Asia.

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Bangui

Bangui (or Bangî in Sango, formerly written Bangi in English) is the capital and largest city of the Central African Republic.

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Banjo enclosure

In archaeology, a banjo enclosure is the name of a type of archaeological feature of the British Middle Iron Age.

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Bank Hall Gardens

Bank Hall Gardens comprise of curtilage at Bank Hall, in Bretherton, Lancashire, England.

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Bankfield Museum

Bankfield Museum is a grade II listed historic house museum, incorporating a regimental museum and textiles gallery in Boothtown, Halifax, England.

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Banks Island

Banks Island is one of the larger members of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.

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Banna (Birdoswald)

Banna, now known as Birdoswald Roman Fort, was a fort, towards the western end of Hadrian's Wall, in the Roman province of Britannia.

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Bannerstone

Bannerstones are artifacts usually found in the Eastern United States that are characterized by a centered hole in a symmetrically shaped carved or ground stone.

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Banoti waterfall

Banoti waterfall is a remote and desolate location off the village of Banoti in the Soegaon taluka of the Aurangabad district in the Maharashtra state of India.

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Bantu expansion

The Bantu expansion is a major series of migrations of the original proto-Bantu language speaking group, who spread from an original nucleus around West Africa-Central Africa across much of sub-Sahara Africa.

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Banwari Trace

Banwari Trace, an Archaic (pre-ceramic) site in southwestern Trinidad, is the oldest archaeological site in the Caribbean.

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Baptism

Baptism (from the Greek noun βάπτισμα baptisma; see below) is a Christian sacrament of admission and adoption, almost invariably with the use of water, into Christianity.

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Bar jack

The bar jack (Caranx ruber), also known as the carbonero, red jack, blue-striped cavalla or passing jack, is a common species of inshore marine fish classified in the jack family, Carangidae.

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Bar-Ilan University

Bar-Ilan University (אוניברסיטת בר-אילן Universitat Bar-Ilan) is a public research university in the city of Ramat Gan in the Tel Aviv District, Israel.

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Baratti and Populonia Archeological Park

The Archaeological Park of Baratti and Populonia is located in the township of Piombino (Province of Livorno) and covers about 80 hectares between the slopes of the promontory of Piombino and the Gulf of Baratti coast.

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Barbara Ann Kipfer

Barbara Ann Kipfer (born 1954) is a lexicographer and an archaeologist.

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Barbara Cleverly

Barbara Cleverly is a British author born in Northern England and a former teacher.

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Barbara Craig

Barbara Denise Craig (née Chapman; 22 October 1915 – 25 January 2005) was a British archaeologist, classicist, and academic, specialising in classical pottery.

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Barbara Harrisson

Barbara Harrisson (born Barbara Veronika Gertrud Maria Elisabeth Güttler,; accessed on December 2, 2016. 20 May 1922 – 26 December 2015) was a German-British art historian who also contributed scientifically to nature conservation, primatology, anthropology, and archaeology.

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Barbara Mor

Barbara Mor (October 3, 1936 — January 24, 2015) was an American poet, editor, and Feminist of the twentieth-century Goddess movement.

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Barbara Tsakirgis

Barbara Tsakirgis (born 1954) is an American classical archaeologist with specialization in Greek and Roman archaeology, particularly of ancient Greek houses and households.

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Barber surgeon of Avebury

The Barber surgeon of Avebury is the name given to a skeleton discovered in 1938 at Avebury in the English county of Wiltshire.

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Barberêche

Barberêche (Bärfischen; Barberêtse) is a former municipality in the district of Lac in the Swiss canton of Fribourg.

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Barberino Val d'Elsa

Barberino Val d'Elsa is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Florence in the Italian region Tuscany, located about south of Florence.

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Barbotine

Barbotine is the French for ceramic slip, or a mixture of clay and water used for moulding or decorating pottery.

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Bardak Siah Palace

Bardak Siah Palace is the name of the site of an ancient Achaemenid Persian palace situated near the township of Borazjan in the northern part of Bushehr Province of Iran.

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Bardo National Museum (Tunis)

The Bardo National Museum (translit; Musée national du Bardo) is a museum of Tunis, Tunisia, located in the suburbs of Le Bardo.

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Barker-Cypress Archeological Site

The Barker-Cypress Archeological Site is a prehistoric preservation area located in Cypress, Harris County, Texas and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Barkly West Museum

The Barkly West Museum was established in 2000 in the old Toll House beside the Barkly Bridge which crosses the Vaal River at Barkly West in the Northern Cape, South Africa.

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Barley

Barley (Hordeum vulgare), a member of the grass family, is a major cereal grain grown in temperate climates globally.

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Barn

A barn is an agricultural building usually on farms and used for various purposes.

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Barnes Creek (Wisconsin)

Barnes Creek is a navigable stream located in the village of Pleasant Prairie in southeastern Kenosha County, Wisconsin, United States.

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Barnesville Petroglyph

The Barnesville Petroglyph is a well-known petroglyph site in the eastern part of the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Barnet Museum

Barnet Museum is in the London Borough of Barnet.

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Barnsdale

Barnsdale, or Barnsdale Forest, is an area of South Yorkshire, England.

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Barrel vault

A barrel vault, also known as a tunnel vault or a wagon vault, is an architectural element formed by the extrusion of a single curve (or pair of curves, in the case of a pointed barrel vault) along a given distance.

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Barri Jones

Geraint Dyfed Barri Jones (4 April 1936 – 16 July 1999) was a classical scholar and archaeologist.

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Barrow, Alaska

Barrow, also known by its native name Utqiagvik, is the largest city and the borough seat of the North Slope Borough in the U.S. state of Alaska and is located north of the Arctic Circle.

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Barry Cunliffe

Sir Barrington Windsor Cunliffe (born 10 December 1939), known as Barry Cunliffe, is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Barry Kemp (Egyptologist)

Barry John Kemp, CBE, FBA is an English archaeologist and Egyptologist.

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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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Barry Raftery

Barry Raftery (16 August 1944 – 22 August 2010) was an Irish archaeologist and Celtic scholar known for his work on the Iron Age in Ireland.

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Barry Zaid

Barry Zaid (born June 8, 1938) is a graphic artist and designer.

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Bars Media

Bars Media Documentary Film Studio was established in 1993 by Vardan Hovhannisyan, who began his career as a frontline filmmaker covering hotspots in the former Soviet Union.

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Bartolomé Ruiz González

Bartolomé Ruiz González (Casabermeja, Málaga, 1954) is a Spanish archaeologist who has been involved in cultural management in Andalucia since the late 1970s.

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Baruch ben Neriah

Baruch ben Neriah (Hebrew: ברוך בן נריה Bārūḵ ben Nêrîyāh, "'Blessed' (Bārūḵ), son (ben) of 'My Candle is Jah' (Nêrîyāh)"; c. 6th century BC) was the scribe, disciple, secretary, and devoted friend of the Biblical prophet Jeremiah.

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Basil Brown

Basil John Wait Brown (22 January 1888 – 12 March 1977) was a self-taught archaeologist and astronomer who in 1939 discovered and excavated a 7th-century Anglo-Saxon ship burial at Sutton Hoo in "one of the most important archaeological discoveries of all time".

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Basil Cottle

Arthur Basil Cottle (17 March 1917 – 13 May 1994) was a British grammarian, historian and archaeologist.

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Basil Gray

Basil Gray CB, CBE, FBA (1904 – 1989), was an art historian, Islamicist, author, and the head of the British Museum’s Oriental department.

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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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Basil of Baker Street

Basil of Baker Street is a series of children's novels written by Eve Titus and illustrated by Paul Galdone.

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Basilica of Our Lady, Maastricht

The Basilica of Our Lady (Basiliek van Onze-Lieve-Vrouw; Limburgish/Maastrichtian: Slevrouwe) is a Romanesque church in the historic center of Maastricht, Netherlands.

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Basin and Range National Monument

Basin and Range National Monument is a national monument of the United States spanning approximately 704,000 acres of remote, undeveloped mountains and valleys in Lincoln and Nye counties in southeastern Nevada.

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Basket weaving

Basket weaving (also basketry or basket making) is the process of weaving or sewing pliable materials into two- or threedimensional artefacts, such as mats or containers.

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Bassam Jamous

Bassam Jamous is a Syrian archaeologist and general director of the Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums (DGAM) in Damascus, Syria.

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Basse-Terre Island

For the largest city on the island of Basse-Terre and capital of Guadeloupe, see Basse-Terre.

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Batadombalena

Batadombalena is an archaeological site with evidence of habitation from 8,000 years BCE, Balangoda Man, located from Colombo in Sri Lanka, a two-hour drive from Colombo.

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Batey (game)

Batéy was the name given to a special plaza around which the Caribbean Taino built their settlements.

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Bath, Somerset

Bath is the largest city in the ceremonial county of Somerset, England, known for its Roman-built baths.

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Battle of Alesia

The Battle of Alesia or Siege of Alesia was a military engagement in the Gallic Wars that took place in September, 52 BC, around the Gallic oppidum (fortified settlement) of Alesia, a major centre of the Mandubii tribe.

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Battle of Camulodunum

The Battle of Camulodunum, also known as the Massacre of the Ninth Legion, (60 or 61 AD) was the major military victory of the Iceni and their allies over an organised Roman army during the revolt of Boudica against the Roman occupation of Britain.

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Battle of Mercredesburne

The Battle of Mercredesburne was one of three battles fought as part of the conquest of what became the Kingdom of Sussex in southern England.

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Battle of Mons Graupius

The Battle of Mons Graupius was, according to Tacitus, a Roman military victory in what is now Scotland, taking place in AD 83 or, less probably, 84.

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Battle of the Teutoburg Forest

The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (Schlacht im Teutoburger Wald, Hermannsschlacht, or Varusschlacht, Disfatta di Varo), described as the Varian Disaster (Clades Variana) by Roman historians, took place in the Teutoburg Forest in 9 CE, when an alliance of Germanic tribes ambushed and decisively destroyed three Roman legions and their auxiliaries, led by Publius Quinctilius Varus.

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Battlefield archaeology

Battlefield archaeology is a sub-discipline of archaeology that began in North America with Dr.

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Baufra

Baufra (also read as Bauefre and Ra-bau-ef) is the name of an alleged son of the ancient Egyptian king (pharaoh) Khufu from the 4th dynasty of the Old Kingdom.

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Bavarian State Archaeological Collection

The Bavarian State Archaeological Collection (Archäologische Staatssammlung, until 2000 known as the Prähistorische Staatssammlung, State Prehistoric Collection) in Munich is the central museum of prehistory of the State of Bavaria, considered to be one of the most important archaeological collections and cultural history museums in Germany.

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Bavarian State Office for Monument Protection

The Bavarian State Office for Monument Protection (Bayerisches Landesamt für Denkmalpflege), or BLfD, is the Bavarian central state authority for the protection of historical monuments.

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Bawit

Bawit (باويط; Coptic: ⲡⲁⲩⲏⲧ) is an archaeological site located north of Asyut, near the village of Dashlout, in Egypt.

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Bay of Wismar

The Bay of Wismar or more commonly Wismar Bay or Wismarbucht is a well sheltered multi-sectioned bay in the southwestern Baltic Sea, in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany, and is considered the south-central part of the much larger arm of the Baltic known as the Mecklenburg Bay (or Mecklenburg Bight, for its long narrow bent shape)—a long fingerlike gulf oriented to the west-southwest (WSW) from the (central) Baltic proper.

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Bà Chúa Xứ

Bà Chúa Xứ or Chúa Xứ Thánh Mẫu (chữ nôm:, Holy Mother of the Realm) is a prosperity goddess of southern Vietnam's Thanism.

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Bâton de commandement

A bâton de commandement, bâton percé or perforated baton is a name given by archaeologists to a particular prehistoric artifact that has been much debated.

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Béni Abbès

Béni Abbès (بني عباس), also known as the Pearl of the Saoura, and also as the White Oasis, is a town and commune located in western Algeria in Béchar Province, far from the provincial capital Béchar, and from Algiers.

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Börsborn

Börsborn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Beachcombing

Beachcombing is an activity that consists of an individual "combing" (or searching) the beach and the intertidal zone, looking for things of value, interest or utility.

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Beagle Channel

Partial aerial view of Beagle Channel. The Chilean Navarino Island is seen in the top-right while the Argentine part of Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego is seen at the bottom-left. Beagle Channel is a strait in Tierra del Fuego Archipelago on the extreme southern tip of South America between Chile and Argentina.

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Beaker (archaeology)

A beaker is a small ceramic or metal drinking vessel shaped to be held in the hands.

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Beale Poste

Beale Poste (1793 – April 15, 1871) was an English antiquary and Anglican cleric.

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Beallsville, Maryland

Beallsville, Maryland is an unincorporated community in Montgomery County, Maryland.

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Bearsted

Bearsted is a village and civil parish with railway station in mid-Kent, England, two miles (3.2 km) east of Maidstone town centre.

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Beatrice de Cardi

Beatrice Eileen de Cardi, (5 June 1914 – 5 July 2016) was a British archaeologist, specializing in the study of the Persian Gulf and the Baluchistan region of Pakistan.

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Beatrice Laura Goff

Beatrice Laura Goff (1903–1998) was an archaeologist and biblical scholar.

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Beatrix Potter

Helen Beatrix Potter (British English, North American English also, 28 July 186622 December 1943) was an English writer, illustrator, natural scientist, and conservationist best known for her children's books featuring animals, such as those in The Tale of Peter Rabbit.

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Beatton River

The Beatton River is a tributary of the Peace River, flowing generally east, then south through north-eastern British Columbia, Canada.

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Beaver Creek Fire

The Beaver Creek Fire was a forest fire that began on August 7, 2013 after a lightning strike in an area twelve miles northeast of Fairfield, Idaho and northwest of Hailey, Idaho in Sawtooth National Forest.

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Beaver Lake point

The Beaver Lake point is a projectile point of the Paleoindian period.

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Becca Peixotto

Rebecca Peixotto is an American archaeologist who is known for her contribution to the Rising Star Expedition as one of the six women Underground Astronauts.

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Becherbach (Bad Kreuznach)

Becherbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Becherbach bei Kirn

Becherbach bei Kirn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Beckedorf (Celle district)

Beckedorf is a village in the municipality of Südheide in northern Celle district in the German state of Lower Saxony.

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Bedesbach

Bedesbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Beehive

A beehive is an enclosed structure man-made in which some honey bee species of the subgenus Apis live and raise their young.

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Beekeeping

Beekeeping (or apiculture) is the maintenance of bee colonies, commonly in man-made hives, by humans.

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Before Jerusalem Fell

Before Jerusalem Fell is a book written by Kenneth Gentry based on his PhD dissertation from Whitefield Theological Seminary.

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Before Present

Before Present (BP) years is a time scale used mainly in geology and other scientific disciplines to specify when events occurred in the past.

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Before the Dawn (book)

Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of Our Ancestors is a non-fiction book by Nicholas Wade, a science reporter for The New York Times.

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Behat

Behat is an ancient town and a nagar panchayat (municipality) in Saharanpur district on the northern tip of the state of Uttar Pradesh, India.

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Beifudi

Beifudi is an archaeological site and Neolithic village in Yi County, Hebei, China.

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Beirut

Beirut (بيروت, Beyrouth) is the capital and largest city of Lebanon.

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Beirut Nights

The Beirut Nights are numbers of events that take place from time to time in Beirut, Lebanon.

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Beit Mery

Beit Mery (بيت مري) is a Lebanese town overlooking the capital Beirut.

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Bel Arvardan

Bel Arvardan is a fictional character in Pebble in the Sky, a part of Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series of stories and novels.

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Belfast Natural History Society

The Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society was founded in 1821 to promote the scientific study of animals, plants, fossils, rocks and minerals.

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Belfast Naturalists' Field Club

The Belfast Naturalists' Field Club is a club of naturalists based in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

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Belgradkapı

Belgradkapı (Turkish for Belgrad Gate) is a quarter in Zeytinburnu district of Istanbul in Turkey.

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Belice

The Belice,, is a river of western Sicily.

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Bellarmino Bagatti

Bellarmino Camillo Bagatti (November 11, 1905 - October 7, 1990) was a 20th-century Italian archaeologist and Catholic priest of the Franciscan Order.

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Bellary

Bellary, officially Ballari, in the eponymous Bellary district, is a major city in the state of Karnataka, India.

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Bellovesus

Bellovesus was a legendary Gallic king.

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Belo Horizonte

Belo Horizonte ("Beautiful Horizon") is the sixth-largest city in Brazil, the thirteenth-largest in South America and the eighteenth-largest in the Americas.

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Beloit College

Beloit College is a private liberal arts college in Beloit, Wisconsin.

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Belvedere auf dem Klausberg

The Belvedere auf dem Klausberg is a building in Sanssouci Park in Potsdam, Germany that is open to the public.

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Belvedere, California

Belvedere is a city in Marin County, California, United States, located northeast of Sausalito.

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Belzoni, Mississippi

Belzoni is a city in Humphreys County, Mississippi, in the Mississippi Delta region, on the Yazoo River.

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Ben Cunnington (archaeologist)

Edward Benjamin Howard Cunnington (1861–1950), was a British archaeologist most famous for his work on prehistoric Wiltshire.

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Ben Finney

Ben Rudolph Finney (October 1, 1933 – May 23, 2017) was an American anthropologist known for his expertise in the history and the cultural and social anthropology of surfing, Polynesian navigation, and canoe sailing, as well as in the cultural and social anthropology of human space colonization.

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Ben Lavin Nature Reserve

Manavhela Ben Lavin Nature Reserve is a nature reserve located close to Louis Trichardt, in the Limpopo province of South Africa.

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Bengal

Bengal (Bānglā/Bôngô /) is a geopolitical, cultural and historical region in Asia, which is located in the eastern part of the Indian subcontinent at the apex of the Bay of Bengal.

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Bengali renaissance

The Bengali renaissance or simply Bengal renaissance, (বাংলার নবজাগরণ; Bānglār nabajāgaraṇ) was a cultural, social, intellectual and artistic movement in Bengal region of the Indian subcontinent during the period of the British Indian Empire, from the nineteenth century to the early twentieth century.

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Bengalis

Bengalis (বাঙালি), also rendered as the Bengali people, Bangalis and Bangalees, are an Indo-Aryan ethnic group and nation native to the region of Bengal in the Indian subcontinent, which is presently divided between most of Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal, Tripura, Assam, Jharkhand.

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Benjamin Fillon

Benjamin Fillon (15 March 1819 – 23 May 1881) was a French numismatist and archaeologist.

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Benjamin Hawkins

Benjamin Hawkins (August 15, 1754June 6, 1816, Encyclopedia of Alabama, accessed July 15, 2011) was an American planter, statesman, and U.S. Indian agent.

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Benjamin Smith Barton

Benjamin Smith Barton (February 10, 1766 – December 19, 1815) was an American botanist, naturalist, and physician.

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Bensheim

Bensheim is a town in the Bergstraße district in southern Hesse, Germany.

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Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site

Bent's Old Fort is an 1833 fort located in Otero County in southeastern Colorado, United States.

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Beothuk

The Beothuk (or; also spelled Beothuck) were an indigenous people based on the island of Newfoundland.

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Beret

A beret is a soft, round, flat-crowned hat, usually of woven, hand-knitted wool, crocheted cotton, wool felt, or acrylic fibre.

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Beric Morley

Beric M. Morley (19 September 1943 – 28 January 2015) was a British architectural historian.

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Berit Wallenberg

Berit Wallenberg (1902–1995) was a Swedish archaeologist, art historian, photographer, and donor.

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Berlin Foundry Cup

The Berlin Foundry Cup (Erzgießerei-Schale) is a red-figure kylix (drinking cup) from the early 5th century BC.

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Bern

Bern or Berne (Bern, Bärn, Berne, Berna, Berna) is the de facto capital of Switzerland, referred to by the Swiss as their (e.g. in German) Bundesstadt, or "federal city".

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Bernadette Menu

Bernadette Menu (born 1942) is a French archaeologist and Egyptologist, whose research work on ancient Egypt is widely known.

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Bernam River

Bernam River (Sungai Bernam) is located between the Malaysian states of Perak and Selangor, demarcating the border of the two states.

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Bernard Ashmole

Bernard Ashmole, CBE, MC (22 June 1894 – 25 February 1988) was a British archaeologist and art historian, who specialized in ancient Greek sculpture.

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Bernard de Montfaucon

Dom Bernard de Montfaucon, O.S.B. (13 January 1655 – 21 December 1741) was a French Benedictine monk of the Congregation of Saint Maur.

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Bernard Fagg

Bernard Evelyn Buller Fagg (8 December 1915 – 14 August 1987) was a British archaeologist and Museum curator who undertook extensive work in Nigeria before and after the Second World War.

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Bernard Goldman

Bernard Goldman (1922 – 2006) was an art historian and archeologist specializing in ancient Near Eastern art and archeology.

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Bernard O'Hara

Bernard O'Hara is an Irish historian, born c. 1945.

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Bernardo Arriaza

Dr.

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Bernhard Salin

Carl Bernhard Salin (14January 1861, Örebro20October 1931, Stockholm), was a Swedish archaeologist, cultural historian and museum curator.

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Bernhard Schweitzer

Bernhard Schweitzer (3 October 1892, Wesel – 16 July 1966, Tübingen) was a German classical archeologist.

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Bernice Summerfield

Bernice Surprise Summerfield (later Professor Bernice Summerfield or just Benny) is a fictional character created by author Paul Cornell as a new companion of the Seventh Doctor in Virgin Publishing's range of original full-length Doctor Who novels, the New Adventures.

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Bernkastel-Kues

Bernkastel-Kues is a well-known winegrowing centre on the Middle Moselle in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Berry (botany)

In botany, a berry is a fleshy fruit without a stone produced from a single flower containing one ovary.

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Bert Hodge Hill

Bert Hodge Hill (March 7, 1874 – December 2, 1958) was an American archeologist and the director of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens from 1906 to 1926.

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Bertha Parker Pallan

Bertha Pallan (née Parker; August 30, 1907 – October 8, 1978) was an American archaeologist.

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Bertha Phillpotts

Dame Bertha Surtees Phillpotts (1877–1932) was an English scholar in Scandinavian languages, literature, history, archaeology and anthropology.

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Bethel College (Kansas)

Bethel College is a four-year private Christian liberal arts college in North Newton, Kansas, United States.

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Bethlehem, New York

Bethlehem is a town in Albany County, New York, USA.

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Bethoron

Bethoron (also Beth-Horon) (House of Horon) was an ancient biblical town strategically located on the Gibeon-Aijalon road, guarding the "ascent of Beth-Horon".

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Bethune Blackwater Schooner

The Bethune Blackwater Schooner is a 19th-century schooner shipwrecked near Milton, in Santa Rosa County, Florida, United States.

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Bettencourt

Bettencourt is a surname and noble family of Norman origin.

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Betty Hemings

Elizabeth "Betty" Hemings (1735 – 1807) was an enslaved mixed-race woman in colonial Virginia.

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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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Betty Meggers

Betty Jane Meggers (December 5, 1921 – July 2, 2012) was an American archaeologist best known for her work in South America.

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Beuren, Cochem-Zell

Beuren is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Beyond the Witch Trials

Beyond the Witch Trials: Witchcraft and Magic in Enlightenment Europe is an academic anthology edited by the historians Owen Davies and Willem de Blécourt.

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Bhabananda Deka

Prof Bhabananda Deka (ভৱানন্দ ডেকা) (19 August 1929 – 4 December 2006) has been acknowledged as the pioneer Assam economist and author, who conducted path-breaking research for the very first time on the economy of the far eastern part of India.

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Bhimber District

Bhimber (Urdu:ضلع بھمبر) is the southernmost of the eight districts of Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

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Bhimgarh Fort

Bhimgarh Fort, generally known as the Reasi Fort, is near Reasi, a town approximately 64 km northwest of Jammu.

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Bi Skaarup

Bi Skaarup (September 9, 1952 in Copenhagen – March 15, 2014 in Copenhagen) was a Danish archeologist, author, food historian and lecturer.

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Biagio Pace

Biagio Pace (Comiso, 13 November 1889 – Comiso, 28 September 1955) was an Italian archaeologist and fascist politician.

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Biberstein

Biberstein is a municipality in the district of Aarau of the canton of Aargau in Switzerland.

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Bible

The Bible (from Koine Greek τὰ βιβλία, tà biblía, "the books") is a collection of sacred texts or scriptures that Jews and Christians consider to be a product of divine inspiration and a record of the relationship between God and humans.

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Bible and Orient Museum

The Bible and Orient Museum (officially: BIBLE+ORIENT Museum) in Fribourg, Switzerland is the exhibition of a collection of ancient Egyptian and ancient Near Eastern miniature art, as well as a project to create a modern museum to compare biblical and extra-biblical texts with archaeological, epigraphical and iconographical data.

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Bible and Spade

Bible and Spade is a quarterly magazine published by the inerrantist Associates for Biblical Research, explicitly committed to the use of archaeology to demonstrate the historical veracity of the Old and New Testaments.

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Bible Lands Museum

The Bible Lands Museum (מוזיאון ארצות המקרא ירושלים.) is an archaeological museum in Jerusalem, Israel, that explores the culture of the peoples mentioned in the Bible, among them the ancient Egyptians, Canaanites, Philistines, Arameans, Hittites, Elamites, Phoenicians and Persians.

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Bible translations into Ilocano

The Ilocano Bible, published in 1909, is the second Bible to be published in any Philippine language, after the Tagalog which was published in 1905.

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Biblical Archaeological Institute

The Biblical Archaeological Institute Wuppertal (BAI) was established in 1999 by the Protestant Church of the Rhineland.

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Biblical Archaeology Review

Biblical Archaeology Review is a bi-monthly magazine that seeks to connect the academic study of archaeology to a broad general audience seeking to understand the world of the Bible and the Near and Middle East (Syro-Palestine and the Levant).

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Biblical archaeology school

Biblical archaeology, occasionally known as Palestinology is the school of archaeology which concerns itself with the biblical world.

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Biblical sandals

The Biblical sandals or Triped sandals are sandals with a simple structure: A sole with two leather ligaments that pass across the foot, and one around the heel.

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Biblical studies

Biblical studies is the academic application of a set of diverse disciplines to the study of the Bible (the Tanakh and the New Testament).

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Bibliography of anthropology

This bibliography of anthropology lists some notable publications in the field of anthropology, including its various subfields.

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Biblioteca William Mulloy

The Biblioteca William Mulloy (Spanish for William Mulloy Library; in Rapa Nui, Hare Puka ko Wiliam Mulloy) is a research library administered by the Father Sebastian Englert Anthropological Museum on Rapa Nui (Easter Island) in Chilean Polynesia.

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Biddulph Grange

Biddulph Grange is a National Trust landscaped garden, in Biddulph near Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England.

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Bidzar

Bidzar is an archaeological site from Guider, Cameroon, featuring petroglyphs between 3000 and 300 years old.

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Biebern

Biebern is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Big and Little Petroglyph Canyons

Big and Little Petroglyph Canyons are two principal landforms within which are found major accumulations of Paleo-Indian and/or Native American Petroglyphs, or rock art, by the Coso People located in the Coso Range Mountains of the northern Mojave Desert, and now within the Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, near the towns of China Lake and Ridgecrest, California.

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Big Eddy Site

The Big Eddy Site (23CE426) is an archaeological site located in Cedar County, Missouri, which was first excavated in 1997 and is now threatened due to erosion by the Sac River.

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Big Heart West

The Big Heart West is an archaeological site near Gulf Breeze, Florida.

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Big History

Big History is an academic discipline which examines history from the Big Bang to the present.

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Big Piney, Wyoming

Big Piney is a town in Sublette County, Wyoming, United States.

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Bigo

Bigo, also Bigo bya Mugenyi, is an extensive alignment of ditches and berms comprising ancient earthworks located in the interlacustrine region of southwestern Uganda.

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Bill Kuehne

William J. Kuehne (October 24, 1858 – October 27, 1921) was an infielder in Major League Baseball who played from 1883 through 1892 for the Columbus Buckeyes (1883–84), Pittsburgh Alleghenys (1885–89), Pittsburgh Burghers (1890), Columbus Solons (1891), Louisville Colonels (1891–92), St. Louis Browns (1892) and Cincinnati Reds (1892).

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Bill Leyden

William "Bill" Leyden (February 1, 1917 in Chicago, Illinois – March 11, 1970 in Hollywood, California) was a television game show host and announcer who emceed six game shows, including It Could Be You (1956–61), Your First Impression (1962–64, with Dennis James), and You're Putting Me On (1969).

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Bill Nye the Science Guy

Bill Nye the Science Guy is an American half-hour live action science program that originally aired on PBS from September 10, 1993 to June 20, 1998 and was also syndicated by Walt Disney Television to local stations.

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Bill Wyman

Bill Wyman (born William George Perks Jr., 24 October 1936) is an English musician, record producer, songwriter and singer.

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Billie Lee Turner II

Billie Lee Turner II (born December 22, 1945, Texas City, Texas, USA) is an American geographer, member of the National Academy of Sciences, and prominent among the third generation of the Berkeley School of Latin Americanist Geography.

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Biloxi people

The Biloxi tribe are Native Americans of the Siouan language family.

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Bimbo Odukoya

Abimbola Rosemary "Bimbo" Odukoya Akinsuyi, Yemi.

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Bint Jbeil

Bint Jbeil is the second largest town in the Nabatiye Governorate in Southern Lebanon.

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Bioclast

Bioclasts are skeletal fossil fragments of once living marine or land organisms that are found in sedimentary rocks laid down in a marine environment—especially limestone varieties around the globe.

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Biofact (archaeology)

In archaeology, a biofact (or ecofact) is organic material found at an archaeological site that carries archaeological significance.

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Biogradska Gora

Biogradska Gora is a forest and a national park in Montenegro within Kolašin municipality.

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Biologia Centrali-Americana

The Biologia Centrali-Americana is an encyclopedia of the natural history of Mexico and Central America, privately issued in 215 parts from 1879 to 1915 by the editors Frederick DuCane Godman and Osbert Salvin, of the British Museum (Natural History) in London.

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Biological anthropology

Biological anthropology, also known as physical anthropology, is a scientific discipline concerned with the biological and behavioral aspects of human beings, their related non-human primates and their extinct hominin ancestors.

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Bionic Six

Bionic Six is an American-Japanese animated television series that aired from 1987 to 1989.

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Biosphere3D

Biosphere3D is an open-source project that targets interactive landscape scenery rendering based on a virtual globe.

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Birbal Sahni

Birbal Sahni FRS (14 November 1891 – 10 April 1949) was an Indian paleobotanist who studied the fossils of the Indian subcontinent.

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Birchington-on-Sea

Birchington-on-Sea is a village in northeast Kent, England, with a population of around 10,000.

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Bird Hammock

The Bird Hammock is a historic site in Wakulla Beach, Florida.

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Bird Homestead

Bird Homestead, also known as the Bouton-Bird-Erikson Homestead, is a historic home and farm complex located in Rye, Westchester County, New York.

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Birger Nerman

Birger Nerman (6 October 1888 – 22 August 1971) was a Swedish archaeologist, professor, and author.

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Birgitta Hoffmann

Birgitta Hoffmann (born 18 May 1969) is an archaeologist, teacher, and scholar of the Roman installations on the Gask Ridge and Roman Scotland north of the Antonine Wall, the Roman Army and the study of glass in antiquity.

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Birgitta Wallace

Birgitta Linderoth Wallace (born 1944) is a Swedish–Canadian archaeologist specialising in the Norse colonisation of North America.

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Birka

Birka (Birca in medieval sources), on the island of Björkö (literally: "Birch Island") in present-day Sweden, was an important Viking Age trading center which handled goods from Scandinavia and Finland as well as Central and Eastern Europe and the Orient.

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Birkenfeld

Birkenfeld is a town and the district seat of the Birkenfeld district in southwest Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Birmenstorf, Aargau

Birmenstorf is a municipality in the district of Baden in the canton of Aargau in Switzerland.

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Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery

Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (BM&AG) is a museum and art gallery in Birmingham, England.

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Birutė Galdikas

Birutė Marija Filomena Galdikas, OC (born 10 May 1946), is a Lithuanian-Canadian anthropologist, primatologist, conservationist, ethologist, and author.

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Biscay

Biscay (Bizkaia; Vizcaya) is a province of Spain located just south of the Bay of Biscay.

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Bishop Road Site

The Bishop Road Site in Campbell County, Wyoming is an archeological site along Piney Creek.

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Bishop Sutton

Bishop Sutton is a small village within the Chew Valley in Somerset.

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Biskupin

The archaeological open-air museum Biskupin is an archaeological site and a life-size model of an Iron Age fortified settlement in Poland (Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship).

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Bizzicu Rossu

Bizzicu Rossu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Bjørnar Olsen

Bjørnar Julius Olsen (born 2 January 1958, Finnmark, Norway) is professor at the University of Tromsø.

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Blackburn

Blackburn is a town in Lancashire, England.

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Blade (archaeology)

In archaeology, a blade is a type of stone tool created by striking a long narrow flake from a stone core.

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Blaenavon

Blaenavon (Blaenafon) is a town in south eastern Wales, lying at the source of the Afon Lwyd north of Pontypool, within the boundaries of the historic county of Monmouthshire and the preserved county of Gwent.

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Blakeney Chapel

Blakeney Chapel is a ruined building on the Norfolk coast of England.

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Blakeney Point

Blakeney Point (designated as Blakeney National Nature Reserve) is a National Nature Reserve situated near to the villages of Blakeney, Morston and Cley next the Sea on the north coast of Norfolk, England.

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Blanche Wheeler Williams

Blanche Wheeler Williams (January 9, 1870 – December 9, 1936) was an archaeologist and teacher best known for her work in the Isthmus of Hierapetra and her discoveries at Gournia with colleague Harriet Boyd Hawes.

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Blank family

The Blank family is a family of Jews, some of whom converted to Orthodox Christianity in the Russian Empire, mostly notable as the immediate ancestry of the maternal grandfather of Vladimir Lenin according to various published researchers who suggest that Lenin's maternal grandfather was a Jewish convert to Christianity (Alexander Blank).

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Blankenburg (Harz)

Blankenburg (Harz) is a town and health resort in the district of Harz, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, at the north foot of the Harz Mountains, southwest of Halberstadt.

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Blas Taracena Aguirre

Blas Taracena Aguirre (Soria, 1 December 1895 – Madrid, 1 February 1951), Spanish archaeologist.

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Bleiburg repatriations

Bleiburg repatriations (see terminology) is a term encompassing events that took place after the end of World War II in Europe, when tens of thousands of soldiers and civilians associated with the Axis fleeing Yugoslavia were repatriated to that country.

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Blevice

Blevice is a village and municipality in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic.

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Blood

Blood is a body fluid in humans and other animals that delivers necessary substances such as nutrients and oxygen to the cells and transports metabolic waste products away from those same cells.

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Blood residue

Blood residue are the wet and dry remnants of blood, as well the discoloration of surfaces on which blood has been shed.

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Bloomvale Historic District

The Bloomvale Historic District is located east of the hamlet of Salt Point, New York, United States.

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Blue Beetle

Blue Beetle is the name of three fictional superheroes who appear in a number of American comic books published by a variety of companies since 1939.

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Blue Guides

The Blue Guides are a series of detailed and authoritative travel guidebooks focused on art, architecture, and (where relevant) archaeology along with the history and context necessary to understand them.

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Bluestonehenge

Bluestonehenge or Bluehenge (also known as West Amesbury Henge) is a prehistoric henge and stone circle monument that was discovered by the Stonehenge Riverside Project about south-east of Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England.

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Blyth, Northumberland

Blyth is a town and civil parish in southeast Northumberland, England.

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Blythburgh Priory

Blythburgh Priory was a medieval monastic house located in the Suffolk village of Blythburgh in England.

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Blytt–Sernander system

The Blytt-Sernander classification, or sequence, is a series of north European climatic periods or phases based on the study of Danish peat bogs by Axel Blytt (1876) and Rutger Sernander (1908).

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Bo (parsha)

Bo (— in Hebrew, the command form of "go," or "come," and the first significant word in the parashah, in) is the fifteenth weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the third in the Book of Exodus.

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Boasian anthropology

Boasian anthropology was a school within American anthropology founded by Franz Boas in the late 19th century.

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Bob Carr (archaeologist)

Robert (Bob) Carr (born July 5, 1947) is an American archaeologist and the current executive director of The Archaeological and Historical Conservancy, Inc.

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Bob Clarke (historian)

Bob Clarke, born in Scarborough in 1964 is an English archaeologist and historian.

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Bob Hudson (singer)

Robert "Bob" Hudson is an Australian singer and radio presenter, his satirical narrative, "The Newcastle Song" topped the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart for four weeks in 1975.

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Bocas del Toro Research Station

The Bocas del Toro Research Station (BRS) is a field station of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) on Panama’s western Caribbean coast, is a platform for both marine and terrestrial biodiversity research.

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Bodiam Castle

Bodiam Castle is a 14th-century moated castle near Robertsbridge in East Sussex, England.

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Bodmin Moor

Bodmin Moor (Goon Brenn) is a granite moorland in northeastern Cornwall, England.

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Body piercing

Body piercing, a form of body modification, is the practice of puncturing or cutting a part of the human body, creating an opening in which jewelry may be worn.

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Bog body

A bog body is a human cadaver that has been naturally mummified in a peat bog.

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Bog butter

"Bog butter" refers to an ancient waxy substance found buried in peat bogs, particularly in Ireland and Great Britain.

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Bog-wood

Bog-wood, also known as abonos and morta, especially amongst pipe smokers, is a material from trees that have been buried in peat bogs and preserved from decay by the acidic and anaerobic bog conditions, sometimes for hundreds or even thousands of years.

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Bogdan Filov

Bogdan Dimitrov Filov (Богдан Димитров Филов) (10 April 1883 – 1 February 1945) was a Bulgarian archaeologist, art historian and politician.

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Bogny-sur-Meuse

Bogny-sur-Meuse is a commune in the Ardennes department in the Grand Est region of northern France.

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Bojacá

Bojacá is a municipality and town of the Western Savanna Province, Colombia in the department of Cundinamarca.

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Bolivia

Bolivia (Mborivia; Buliwya; Wuliwya), officially known as the Plurinational State of Bolivia (Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia), is a landlocked country located in western-central South America.

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Boljoon

Boljoon (also Boljo-on) is a settlement_text in the province of, Philippines.

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Bolko von Richthofen

Bolko von Richthofen (September 13, 1899 – March 18, 1983) was a German archaeologist and a distant relative of the family of Manfred von Richthofen, the "Red Baron".

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Bolu Museum

Bolu Museum is a museum in Bolu, Turkey.

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Bone

A bone is a rigid organ that constitutes part of the vertebrate skeleton.

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Bone Detectives

Bone Detectives is a television series that made its debut on The Discovery Channel on Saturday December 29, 2007, at 10 P.M. Eastern time.

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Bone tool

In archaeology, a bone tool is a tool created from bone.

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Bones (TV series)

Bones is an American crime procedural drama television series that aired on Fox in the United States from September 13, 2005, until March 28, 2017, for 246 episodes over twelve seasons.

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Bonfire Shelter

Bonfire Shelter is an archaeological site located in a southwest Texas rock shelter, near Langtry, Texas.

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Bonin petrel

The Bonin petrel (Pterodroma hypoleuca) is a seabird in the family Procellariidae.

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Bonnet Carré Spillway

The Bonnet Carré Spillway is a flood control operation in the Lower Mississippi Valley.

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Book of Mormon Historic Publication Site

The Book of Mormon Historic Publication Site is a historic site located in the village of Palmyra, Wayne County, New York, United States.

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Boos, Bad Kreuznach

Boos is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Boppard

Boppard, formerly also spelled Boppart, is a town and municipality (since the 1976 inclusion of 9 neighbouring villages, Ortsbezirken) in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, lying in the Rhine Gorge, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

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Borbeck-Mitte

Borbeck-Mitte is the central borough of Borbeck, the fourth suburban district of Essen, Germany.

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Bordesley Abbey

Bordesley Abbey was a 12th-century Cistercian abbey near the town of Redditch, in Worcestershire, England.

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Boris Grakov

Boris Nikolaevich Grakov (Борис Николаевич Граков) (in Onega — September 14, 1970 in Moscow) was a Soviet Russian archaeologist, who specialized in Scythian and Sarmatian archeology, classical philology and ancient epigraphy.

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Boris Johnson

Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson (born 19 June 1964), best known as Boris Johnson, is a British politician, popular historian and journalist serving as Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs since 2016 and the Member of Parliament (MP) for Uxbridge and South Ruislip since 2015.

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Boris Kuftin

Boris Alekseevich Kuftin (February 2, 1892, in Samara, Russia - August 2, 1953, in Lielupe (now a part of Jūrmala) was a Soviet archaeologist and ethnographer. From 1933 to 1953, he worked in Tbilisi, Georgian SSR. In the 1930s, he discovered the Trialeti culture; and in 1940, he coined the term Kura-Araxes. He participated in the South Turkmenistan Complex Archaeological Expedition in the 1940s-1950s. Kuftin became a member of the Georgian National Academy of Sciences in 1946.

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Boris Marshak

Boris Ilich Marshak (Бори́с Ильи́ч Марша́к) (July 9, 1933 – 28 July 2006) was an archeologist who spent more than fifty years excavating the Sogdian ruins at Panjakent, Tajikistan.

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Boris Piotrovsky

Boris Borisovich Piotrovsky (Бори́с Бори́сович Пиотро́вский; also written Piotrovskii; – October 15, 1990) was a Soviet Russian academician, historian-orientalist and archaeologist who studied the ancient civilizations of Urartu, Scythia, and Nubia.

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Borivali

Borivali or Borivli is a neighborhood located in north-west Mumbai.

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Borneo

Borneo (Pulau Borneo) is the third largest island in the world and the largest in Asia.

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Borobudur ship

A Borobudur ship is the 8th-century wooden double outrigger, sailed vessel of Maritime Southeast Asia depicted in some bas reliefs of the Borobudur Buddhist monument in Central Java, Indonesia.

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Boronów

Boronów (Boronow) is a village in Lubliniec County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland.

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Borra Caves

The Borra Caves, also called Borra Guhalu (Borra means hole in Odia language and guhalu means caves in Telugu language), are located on the East Coast of India, in the Ananthagiri hills of the Araku Valley (with hill ranges' elevation varying from) of the Visakhapatnam district in Andhra Pradesh.

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Borrering

Borrering Anders Petersen: Vallø og Omegn.

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Boscombe Bowmen

The Boscombe Bowmen is the name given by archaeologists to a group of early Bronze Age individuals found in a shared burial at Boscombe Down in Amesbury near Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England.

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Bosnian pyramid claims

The 'Bosnian pyramid complex' is a debunked, pseudoarchaeological notion to explain the formation of a cluster of natural hills in central Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Boudica

Boudica (Latinised as Boadicea or Boudicea, and known in Welsh as Buddug) was a queen of the British Celtic Iceni tribe who led an uprising against the occupying forces of the Roman Empire in AD 60 or 61, and died shortly after its failure, having supposedly poisoned herself.

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Bourbourg

Bourbourg is a commune in the Nord department in northern France.

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Bourne Park House

Bourne Park House is a Queen Anne style country house on Bourne Park Road, between Bishopsbourne and Bridge near Canterbury in Kent.

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Bout-coupé

In archaeology, a bout-coupé is a type of handaxe that constituted part of the Neanderthal Mousterian industry of the Middle Palaeolithic.

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Bowdun Head

Bowdun Head is a headland landform on the North Sea coast approximately one kilometre south of Stonehaven, Scotland.(Ordnance Survey, 2004) Slightly to the north is another headland, Downie Point.

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Bowl

A bowl is a round, open-top container used in many cultures to serve hot and cold food.

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Bowl barrow

A bowl barrow is a type of burial mound or tumulus.

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Boxgrove

Boxgrove is a village and civil parish in the Chichester District of the English county of West Sussex, about five kilometres (3.5 miles) north east of the city of Chichester.

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Boyd Wettlaufer

Boyd Nicholas David Wettlaufer, (2 May 1914 – 27 November 2009) was a Canadian archaeologist, considered as 'the Father of Saskatchewan Archaeology.' His groundbreaking archaeological work in western Canada is considered the foundation of our knowledge of the Northern Plains First Nations people.

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Bracelet

A bracelet is an article of jewellery that is worn around the wrist.

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Bracken Hall Countryside Centre and Museum

Bracken Hall Countryside Centre and Museum is a children's museum, natural history education centre and nature centre established in 1989 at Bracken Hall on the edge of Baildon Moor, close to Shipley Glen in West Yorkshire.

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Bracquemont

Bracquemont is a former commune in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region in northern France.

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Brad Lidge

Bradley Thomas Lidge (born December 23, 1976) is a former professional baseball relief pitcher.

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Bradford on Avon

Bradford on Avon (sometimes Bradford-on-Avon) is a town and civil parish in west Wiltshire, England, with a population of 9,402 at the 2011 census.

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Bradley hill fort

Bradley hill fort is an Iron Age hill fort.

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Bradshaw rock paintings

Bradshaw rock paintings, Bradshaw rock art, Bradshaw figures or The Bradshaws, are terms used to describe one of the two major regional traditions of rock art found in the north-west Kimberley region of Western Australia.

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Brahmagiri archaeological site

Brahmagiri is an archaeological site located in the Chitradurga district of the state of Karnataka, India.

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Brain

The brain is an organ that serves as the center of the nervous system in all vertebrate and most invertebrate animals.

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Braith-Mali-Museum

The Braith-Mali-Museum is a museum with several sections in Biberach an der Riss in Upper Swabia.

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Brampton, Norfolk

Brampton is a small village and parish in the county of Norfolk, England, in the Bure Valley, east of Aylsham.

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Branches of science

The branches of science, also referred to as sciences, "scientific fields", or "scientific disciplines" are commonly divided into three major groups.

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Brandberge

The Brandberge is a protected natural area in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, in the northwest of Halle.

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Branko Fučić

Branko Fučić (8 September 1920 – 30 January 1999) was a Croatian art historian, archeologist and paleographer.

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Brantwood

Brantwood is a historic house museum in Cumbria, England, overlooking Coniston Water.

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Brass

Brass is a metallic alloy that is made of copper and zinc.

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Bratislava

Bratislava (Preßburg or Pressburg, Pozsony) is the capital of Slovakia.

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Brauweiler, Rhineland-Palatinate

Brauweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History

The Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History is a science, nature and cultural history museum in Bryan, Texas, United States.

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Brean Down

Brean Down is a promontory off the coast of Somerset, England, standing high and extending into the Bristol Channel at the eastern end of Bridgwater Bay between Weston-super-Mare and Burnham-on-Sea.

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Brežice Castle

Brežice Castle (Grad Brežice, Schloss Rann) is a 16th-century castle in the town of Brežice, in southeastern Slovenia, at the street address Cesta prvih borcev 1.

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Brechen

Brechen is a community in Limburg-Weilburg district in Hesse, Germany.

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Breitenbach, Rhineland-Palatinate

Breitenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Breitenheim

Breitenheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate

Breitenthal (Hunsrück) (Hunsrückisch: Bränel) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Breitscheid, Hesse

Breitscheid is a community in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis in Hesse, Germany.

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Brent E. Huffman

Brent Edward Huffman (born September 4, 1979) is an American director, writer, and cinematographer of documentaries and television programs, including Saving Mes Aynak (2014).

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Brescia Metro

The Brescia Metro (Metropolitana di Brescia) is a rapid transit network serving Brescia, Lombardy, Italy.

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Brest, France

Brest is a city in the Finistère département in Brittany.

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Bretzenheim

Bretzenheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Brevard Museum of History & Natural Science

The Brevard Museum of History & Natural Science is located at 2201 Michigan Avenue, Cocoa, Florida.

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Brian Dobson (archaeologist)

Brian Dobson, FSA (13 September 1931 – 19 July 2012) was an English archaeologist, teacher and scholar.

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Brian Hope-Taylor

Brian Hope-Taylor (b. Surrey, 21 October 1923 – Cambridge, 12 January 2001) was an artist, archaeologist, broadcaster and university lecturer, who made a significant contribution to the understanding of early British history.

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Brian M. Fagan

Brian Murray Fagan (born 1 August 1936) is a prolific British author of popular archaeology books and a professor emeritus of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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Bridei I

Bridei I, also known as Bridei, son of Maelchon, was king of the Picts from 554 to 584.

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Bridger Antelope Trap

The Bridger Antelope Trap is an archaeological site in Uinta County, Wyoming, associated with local American Indian hunting practices.

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Bridgwater Bay

Bridgwater Bay is on the Bristol Channel, north of Bridgwater in Somerset, England at the mouth of the River Parrett and the end of the River Parrett Trail.

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Brigantes

The Brigantes were a Celtic tribe who in pre-Roman times controlled the largest section of what would become Northern England.

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Brigham Young University Museum of Peoples and Cultures

The Brigham Young University Museum of Peoples and Cultures, located in Provo, Utah, is the university's museum of archaeology and ethnology.

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Briquetage

Briquetage is a coarse ceramic material used to make evaporation vessels and supporting pillars used in extracting salt from brine or seawater.

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Bristol

Bristol is a city and county in South West England with a population of 456,000.

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Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery

Bristol Museum & Art Gallery is a large museum and art gallery in Bristol, England.

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Brit Solli

Brit Solli (born 1959) is a Norwegian archaeologist and Professor of Medieval archaeology at the Museum of Cultural History in Oslo.

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British and Irish stained glass (1811–1918)

A revival of the art and craft of stained-glass window manufacture took place in early 19th-century Britain, beginning with an armorial window created by Thomas Willement in 1811–12.

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British Archaeological Association

The British Archaeological Association (BAA) was founded in 1843 and aims to inspire, support and disseminate high quality research in the fields of Western archaeology, art and architecture, primarily of the mediæval period, through lectures, conferences, study days and publications.

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British Columbia Coast

The British Columbia Coast or BC Coast is Canada's western continental coastline on the North Pacific Ocean.

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British Iron Age

The British Iron Age is a conventional name used in the archaeology of Great Britain, referring to the prehistoric and protohistoric phases of the Iron Age culture of the main island and the smaller islands, typically excluding prehistoric Ireland, which had an independent Iron Age culture of its own.

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British Israelism

British Israelism (also called Anglo-Israelism) is a movement which holds the view that the people of England (or more broadly, the people of United Kingdom) are "genetically, racially, and linguistically the direct descendants" of the Ten Lost Tribes of ancient Israel.

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British School at Athens

The British School at Athens (BSA) (Βρετανική Σχολή Αθηνών) is one of the 17 Foreign Archaeological Institutes in Athens, Greece.

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British school of diffusionism

The British school of diffusionism was an archaeological and anthropological movement which believed ancient Egypt was the source of all human culture.

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British-Israel-World Federation

The British-Israel-World Federation, also known as the British-Israel World Federation was founded in London on 3 July 1919, although its roots can be traced back to the 19th century.

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Brněnec

Brněnec (Brünnlitz) is a village in the Pardubice Region of the Czech Republic.

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Broad Creek (Susquehanna River tributary)

Broad Creek is a tributary of the lower Susquehanna River located in Harford County, Maryland.

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Broch

A broch is an Iron Age drystone hollow-walled structure of a type found only in Scotland.

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Brockenhurst College

Brockenhurst College, or colloquially known as Brock, is in the tertiary sector providing education in a wide range of courses for many different ages.

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Bronze Head from Ife

The Bronze Head from Ife, or Ife Head, is one of eighteen copper alloy sculptures that were unearthed in 1938 at Ife in Nigeria, the religious and former royal centre of the Yoruba people.

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Bronze mirror

Bronze mirrors preceded the glass mirrors of today.

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Bronze- and Iron-Age Poland

The Bronze and Iron Age cultures in Poland are known mainly from archeological research.

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Brooklyn, Illinois

Brooklyn (popularly known as Lovejoy), is a village in St. Clair County, Illinois, United States.

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Brothertown Indians

The Brothertown Indians (also Brotherton), located in Wisconsin, are a Native American tribe formed in the late eighteenth century from communities so-called "praying Indians" (or Moravian Indians), descended from Christianized Pequot and Mohegan (Algonquian-speaking) tribes of southern New England and eastern Long Island, New York.

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Brownsville, Pennsylvania

Brownsville is a borough in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, United States, first settled in 1785 as the site of a trading post a few years after the pacification of the Iroquois enabled a post-Revolutionary war resumption of westward migration.

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Bruce Chatwin

Charles Bruce Chatwin (13 May 194018 January 1989) was an English travel writer, novelist, and journalist.

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Bruce D. Smith

Bruce D. Smith (born 1946) is an American archaeologist and curator at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History who primarily focuses on the interaction of humans with their environment, especially the origins of agriculture in eastern North America agricultural complex.

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Bruce Granville Miller

Bruce Granville Miller serves as a Professor of Sociocultural Anthropology and Graduate Program Chair of the Anthropology Graduate Studies Committee (AGSC) in the Department of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia.

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Bruce McFadgen

Bruce McFadgen (born 1943) is a New Zealand surveyor and archaeologist.

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Bruce Museum of Arts and Science

The Bruce Museum is a museum in downtown Greenwich, Connecticut with both art and natural history exhibition space.

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Bruce Trigger

Bruce Graham Trigger, (June 18, 1937 – December 1, 2006) was a Canadian archaeologist, anthropologist, and ethnohistorian.

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Bruce W. Warren

Bruce W. Warren is a professor of archeology at Brigham Young University.

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Bruchweiler

Bruchweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway

Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway (born 1929 in Chieti) is an Italian archaeologist and specialist in ancient Greek sculpture.

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Bruno Keil

Bruno Keil (8 July 1859 in Havelberg – 23 March 1916 in Leipzig) was a German classical philologist.

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Bruno Schulz (architect)

Bruno Schulz (24 February 1865, Friedeberg – 1 April 1932, Berlin) was a German architectural historian.

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Brunton compass

A Brunton compass, properly known as the Brunton Pocket Transit, is a type of precision compass made by Brunton, Inc. of Riverton, Wyoming.

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Brunton, Inc.

Brunton, Inc. ® is a manufacturer of technical gear for outdoor activity located in Riverton, Wyoming.

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Bry-sur-Marne

Bry-sur-Marne is a commune in the Val-de-Marne department in the eastern suburbs of Paris, France.

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Bryan Ward-Perkins

Bryan Ward-Perkins is an archaeologist and historian of the later Roman Empire and early Middle Ages, with a particular focus on the transitional period between those two eras, an historical sub-field also known as Late Antiquity.

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Bryant G. Wood

Bryant G. Wood is a biblical archaeologist and young earth creationist.

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Brymbo

Brymbo is a local government community, the lowest tier of local government, part of Wrexham County Borough in Wales.

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Bryn Celli Ddu

Bryn Celli Ddu is a prehistoric site on the Welsh island of Anglesey located near Llanddaniel Fab.

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Bryn Mawr College

Bryn Mawr College (Welsh) is a women's liberal arts college in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

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Bryony Coles

Bryony Jean Coles, (born 12 August 1946) is a prehistoric archaeologist and academic.

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Buborn

Buborn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Buckland Anglo-Saxon cemetery

Buckland Anglo-Saxon cemetery was a place of burial.

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Buddhism in Himachal Pradesh

Buddhism in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh can be traced back to the spread of Buddhism in the early 8th century.

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Buddhist Studies Review

Buddhist Studies Review is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Equinox on behalf of the UK Association for Buddhist Studies.

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Budva

Budva (Montenegrin Cyrillic: Будва, or; Italian and Albanian: Budua) is a Montenegrin town on the Adriatic Sea, former bishopric and present Latin Catholic titular see.

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Buena Vista, Peru

Buena Vista is an 8 hectare (20 acre) archaeological site located in Peru about 25 miles inland in the Chillon River Valley and an hour's drive north of Lima, the capital.

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Buildings and architecture of Bath

The buildings and architecture of Bath, a city in Somerset in the south west of England, reveal significant examples of the architecture of England, from the Roman Baths (including their significant Celtic presence), to the present day.

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Bukit Kerang

Bukit Kerang is an archaeological site of the Mesolithic era found in the Aceh Tamiang regency, Aceh, Eastern Sumatra, Indonesia.

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Bulb of applied force

In lithic analysis, a subdivision of archaeology, a bulb of applied force (also known as a bulb of percussion or simply bulb of force) is a defining characteristic of a lithic flake.

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Bulgaria

Bulgaria (България, tr.), officially the Republic of Bulgaria (Република България, tr.), is a country in southeastern Europe.

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Bulletin of the History of Archaeology

The Bulletin of the History of Archaeology is an open access, peer-reviewed academic journal publishing research, reviews, and short communications on the history of archaeology.

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Bulmer's fruit bat

Bulmer's fruit bat (Aproteles bulmerae) is a megabat endemic to New Guinea.

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Bura archaeological site

The archeological site of Bura is located in the Tillabéry Region, of the Tera Department, in southwest Niger.

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Bura culture

The Bura culture (Bura system) refers to a set of archeological sites in the lower Niger River valley of Niger and Burkina Faso.

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Burchell's Shelter

Burchell’s Shelter is a small rock overhang and archaeological site located in a kloof in the Ghaap Escarpment at Campbell in the Northern Cape, South Africa.

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Bureau of American Ethnology

The Bureau of American Ethnology (or BAE, originally, Bureau of Ethnology) was established in 1879 by an act of Congress for the purpose of transferring archives, records and materials relating to the Indians of North America from the Interior Department to the Smithsonian Institution.

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Burgeis

Burgeis (Burgusio, Barbusch) is the largest frazione of the comune of Mals, Italy, and sits at an altitude of 1216m in Vinschgau in South Tyrol beneath the mountain Watles (2557) on the upper reaches of the Adige.

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Burhaniye National Forces Culture Museum

Burhaniye National Forces Culture Museum (Burhaniye Kuva'i Milliye Kültür Müzesi) is a museum in Burhaniye district of Balıkesir Province in western Turkey.

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Burial

Burial or interment is the ritual act of placing a dead person or animal, sometimes with objects, into the ground.

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Burial Act 1857

The Burial Act 1857 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

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Burial in Anglo-Saxon England

Burial in Early Anglo-Saxon England refers to the grave and burial customs followed by the Anglo-Saxons between the mid 5th and 11th centuries CE in Early Mediaeval England.

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Burial Ridge

Burial Ridge is a Native American archaeological site and burial ground located at Ward's Point - a bluff overlooking Raritan Bay in what is today the Tottenville section of Staten Island.

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Burin (lithic flake)

Burin from the Upper Paleolithic (Gravettian) (ca. 29,000–22,000 BP) In the field of lithic reduction, a burin (from the French burin, meaning "cold chisel" or modern engraving burin) is a type of handheld lithic flake with a chisel-like edge which prehistoric humans used for engraving or for carving wood or bone.

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Burledge Hill

Burledge Hill is on the southern edge of the village of Bishop Sutton, Somerset, England.

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Burma studies

Burma Studies is a grouping used in research universities around the world as a way of bringing together specialists from different disciplines such as history, cultural anthropology, archeology, religious studies, art history, political science, and musicology, who are doing research in these areas focused on the geographical area of what is today the country of Burma or Myanmar, often using the Burmese language, or a language of one of its ethnic groups such as the Shan, Mon, Karen, Chin, or Kachin.

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Burn of Ayreland

The Burn of Ayreland (or Ireland) is a northwesterly flowing coastal stream on Mainland Orkney, Scotland, that discharges to the Clestrain Sound about two miles south of Stenness.

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Burnet Cave

Burnet Cave (also known as Rocky Arroyo Cave of Wetmore) is an important archaeological and paleontological site located in Eddy County, New Mexico, United States within the Guadalupe Mountains.

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Burnley

Burnley is a market town in Lancashire, England, with a population of 73,021.

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Burnt Fen

Burnt Fen is an area of low-lying land crossed by the A1101 road between Littleport in Cambridgeshire and Mildenhall in Suffolk, England.

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Burpee Museum of Natural History

The Burpee Museum of Natural History is located along the Rock River in downtown Rockford, Illinois, United States, at 737 North Main Street.

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Burrington Camp

Burrington Camp, also known as Burrington Ham, is an Iron Age hill fort in the North Somerset district of Somerset, England.

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Burrington Combe

Burrington Combe is a Carboniferous Limestone gorge near the village of Burrington, on the north side of the Mendip Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, in North Somerset, England.

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Bursa

Bursa is a large city in Turkey, located in northwestern Anatolia, within the Marmara Region.

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Bursa Archaeological Museum

Bursa Archaeological Museum (Bursa Arkeoloji Müzesi), shortly Bursa Museum, is a national museum in Bursa, Turkey, exhibiting archaeological artifacts found in and around the province.

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Burton Mound

Burton Mound (also known as Syujtun or Syuxtun) is a California Historical Landmark located in Santa Barbara, California, in the United States.

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But and ben

But and ben is an architectural style for a simple building, usually applied to a residence.

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Buthrotum

Butrint (Buthrōtum; from Bouthrōtón) was an ancient Greek and later Roman city and bishopric in Epirus.

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Buttermilk Creek Complex

Buttermilk Creek Complex refers to the remains of a paleolithic settlement along the shores of Buttermilk Creek in present-day Salado, Texas dated to approximately 15,500 years old.

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Butters' Tavern

Butters’ Tavern, an old time hostelry, was a privately owned inn and tavern located at the south end of Main Street, Concord, New Hampshire, at the junction of South Main, Water, and West streets.

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Button

In modern clothing and fashion design, a button is a small fastener, now most commonly made of plastic, but also frequently made of metal, wood or seashell, which secures two pieces of fabric together.

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Butuan Silver Paleograph

The Butuan Silver Palaeograph, also known as the "Butuan Silver Strip", is a piece of metal with inscriptions found in Butuan province in mid-1970s by a team of archaeologists from the National Museum of the Philippines.

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Buxton

Buxton is a spa town in Derbyshire, in the East Midlands region of England.

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Buxton Museum and Art Gallery

Buxton Museum and Art Gallery focuses its collection on history, geology and archaeology primarily from the Peak District and Derbyshire.

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Byron Edmund Walker

Sir Byron Edmund Walker, CVO (14 October 1848 – 27 March 1924) was a Canadian banker.

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Byron Khun de Prorok

"Count" Byron Khun de Prorok (1896–1954, born in Philadelphia as Francis Byron Kuhn) was a Hungarian-American amateur archaeologist, anthropologist, and author of four heroic travelogues.

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Byzantine Mosaics

Beirut's Souk's Byzantine Mosaics are located in Beirut, Lebanon.

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C. Brian Rose

Charles Brian Rose is an American archaeologist, classical scholar, and author.

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C. J. Cherryh

Carolyn Janice Cherry (born September 1, 1942), better known by the pen name C. J. Cherryh, is an American writer of speculative fiction.

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C. J. Ostl Site

The C. J. Ostl Site is an archaeological site in Ochopee, Florida.

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C. Malcolm Watkins

C.

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C. Sivaramamurti

Calambur Sivaramamurti, (1909–1983) was an Indian museologist, art historian and epigraphist who is primarily known for his work as curator in the Government Museum, Chennai.

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C. W. Ceram

C.

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Cabin Lake Guard Station

The Cabin Lake Guard Station is a Forest Service compound consisting of six simple rustic buildings located in the Deschutes National Forest in central Oregon.

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Cabinet of curiosities

Cabinets of curiosities (also known in German loanwords as Kunstkabinett, Kunstkammer or Wunderkammer; also Cabinets of Wonder, and wonder-rooms) were encyclopedic collections of objects whose categorical boundaries were, in Renaissance Europe, yet to be defined.

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Cacaxtla

Cacaxtla is an archaeological site located near the southern border of the Mexican state of Tlaxcala.

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Caerleon

Caerleon (Caerllion) is a suburban town and community, situated on the River Usk in the northern outskirts of the city of Newport, Wales.

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Cafer Höyük

Cafer Hoyuk or Cafer Höyük is an archaeological site located around northeast of Malatya, Turkey in the Euphrates valley.

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Cagayan Valley

Cagayan Valley (Tanap ti Cagayan; Tana' nat Cagayan; Tanap yo Cagayan; Tanap na Cagayan; Lambak ng Cagayan) (designated as Region II) is an administrative region in the Philippines located in the northeastern portion of Luzon.

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Caguana Ceremonial Ball Courts Site

The Caguana Ceremonial Ball Courts Site in barrio Caguana, Utuado, Puerto Rico, is considered one of the most important archeological sites in the West Indies.

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Cahokia, Illinois

Cahokia is a village in St. Clair County, Illinois, United States which is in the Greater St. Louis metropolitan area.

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Cahul District

Cahul is a district (raion) in the south of Moldova, with the administrative center at Cahul.

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Caitlín R. Kiernan

Caitlín Rebekah Kiernan (born 26 May 1964) is an Irish-born American author of science fiction and dark fantasy works, including ten novels, many comic books, and more than two hundred and fifty published short stories, novellas, and vignettes.

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Caixa de Rotllan

The Caixa de Rotllan (meaning "Roland's Tomb" in Catalan language) is a dolmen in Arles-sur-Tech, Pyrénées-Orientales, South of France, dating back to the Neolithic period, during the second half of 3rd millennium BC.

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Cajamarca

Cajamarca is the capital and largest city of the Cajamarca Region as well as an important cultural and commercial center in the northern Andes.

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Cala de Sant Vicent

Cala de Sant Vicent is a beach resort village on the Spanish island of Ibiza.

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Calathea allouia

Calathea allouia, known as lerén or lairén in Spanish, and also known in English as Guinea arrowroot, and sweet corn root, is a plant in the arrowroot family, native to northern South America and the Caribbean, The name "allouia" is derived from the Carib name for the plant Leren is a minor food crop in the American tropics, but was one of the earliest plants domesticated by pre-historic Indians in South America.

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Calathus (basket)

A calathus or kalathos (κάλαθος, plural calathi or kalathoi κάλαθοι) was a basket in the form of a top hat, used to hold wool or fruit, often used in ancient Greek art as a symbol of abundance and fertility.

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Calceology

Calceology (from Latin calcei "shoes" and -λογία, -logiā, "-logy") is the study of footwear, especially historical footwear whether as archaeology, shoe fashion history, or otherwise.

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Calcite

Calcite is a carbonate mineral and the most stable polymorph of calcium carbonate (CaCO3).

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Calcot Manor

Calcot Manor is a historic building in Calcot, three and a half miles west of Tetbury on A 4135 in Gloucestershire, England, near the junction of roads A46 and A4135 (National Grid Reference ST 841180 94891).

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Caldicot and Wentloog Levels

The Caldicot and Wentloog Levels are two areas of low-lying estuarine alluvial wetland and intertidal mudflats adjoining the north bank of the Severn Estuary, either side of the River Usk estuary near Newport in south east Wales.

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Calhoun County, Illinois

Calhoun County is a county in the U.S. state of Illinois.

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California Register of Historical Resources

The California Register of Historical Resources is a California state government program for use by state and local agencies, private groups and citizens to identify, evaluate, register and protect California's historical resources.

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Calixtlahuaca

Calixtlahuaca (from the Nahuatl, where calli means "house", and ixtlahuatl means "prairie" or "plains", hence the translation would be "house in the prairie") is a Postclassic period Mesoamerican archaeological site, located near the present-day city of Toluca in the State of Mexico.

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Callanish Stones

The Callanish Stones (or "Callanish I", Clachan Chalanais or Tursachan Chalanais in Scottish Gaelic) are an arrangement of standing stones placed in a cruciform pattern with a central stone circle.

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Callawassie Island

Callawassie Island is one of hundreds of barrier and sea islands in the southeast corner in the outer coastal plain, making up a portion of Beaufort County, South Carolina.

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Caltiki – The Immortal Monster

Caltiki, The Immortal Monster (Caltiki, il mostro immortale) is a 1959 black-and-white science fiction-horror film.

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Camargue horse

The Camargue horse is an ancient breed of horse indigenous to the Camargue area in southern France.

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Camber Castle

Camber Castle, also known formerly as Winchelsea Castle, is a 16th-century Device Fort, built near Rye by King Henry VIII to protect the Sussex coast of England against French attack.

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Cambridge Antiquarian Society

The Cambridge Antiquarian Society is a society dedicated to study and preservation of the archaeology, history, and architecture of Cambridgeshire, England.

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Cambridge Archaeological Journal

The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is a peer-reviewed academic journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.

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Cambridgeshire

Cambridgeshire (abbreviated Cambs.), is an East Anglian county in England, bordering Lincolnshire to the north, Norfolk to the north-east, Suffolk to the east, Essex and Hertfordshire to the south, and Bedfordshire and Northamptonshire to the west.

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Camerton, Somerset

Camerton is a village and civil parish in Somerset, south west of Bath, lying on the Cam Brook.

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Camille Enlart

Camille Enlart (22 November 1862 at Boulogne-sur-Mer - 14 February 1927 at Paris) was a French archaeologist and art historian.

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Camille Jullian

Camille Jullian (15 March 1859 – 12 December 1933) was a French historian, philologist, archaeologist and historian of French literature, student of Fustel de Coulanges, whose posthumous work he published.

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Camillo Praschniker

Camillo Praschniker (13 October 1884, Vienna – 1 October 1949, Vienna) was an Austrian archaeologist.

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Camiola

Camiola Turinga was from Messina and was known as a virtuous woman.

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Camp Trousdale

Camp Trousdale, in Portland, Sumner County, Tennessee, was an early staging and training area for Tennessee Confederate units during the American Civil War, used from June through November 1861.

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Campania

Campania is a region in Southern Italy.

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Campu di Bonu

Campu di Bonu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Campuses of the University of the Witwatersrand

The campuses of the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg contain a number of notable buildings.

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Camulodunum

Camulodunum (camvlodvnvm), the Ancient Roman name for what is now Colchester in Essex, was an important town in Roman Britain, and the first capital of the province.

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Canaanean blade

A Canaanean blade is an archaeological term for a long, wide blade made out of stone or flint, predominantly found at sites in Israel and Lebanon (ancient Canaan).

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Canaanism

Canaanism was a cultural and ideological movement founded in 1939 that reached its peak in the 1940s among the Jews of Palestine.

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Canadian Museum of History

The Canadian Museum of History (Musée canadien de l’histoire), formerly the Canadian Museum of Civilization (Musée canadien des civilisations), is Canada's national museum of human history.

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Canajoharie

Canajoharie, also known as the "Upper Castle", was the name of one of two major towns of the Mohawk nation in 1738.

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Canary Islands in pre-colonial times

The Canary Islands have been known since antiquity.

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Candan Erçetin

Candan Erçetin, (born 10 February 1963, in Kırklareli) is a Turkish-Albanian singer, songwriter and Vice-President of Galatasaray.

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Canna (plant)

Canna (or canna lily, although not a true lily) is a genus of 10 species of flowering plants.

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Canosa di Puglia

Canosa di Puglia, generally known simply as Canosa (Apulian: Canaus), is a town and comune in Apulia in southern Italy, between Bari and Foggia, located in the province of Barletta-Andria-Trani.

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Cansu Dere

Cansu Dere (born on October 14, 1980 in Ankara) is a Turkish film and television actress, model, and beauty pageant runner-up.

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Canterbury Astrolabe Quadrant

The Canterbury Astrolabe Quadrant is a medieval astrolabe believed to date from 1388, and which was found in an archeological dig at the House of Agnes, a bed and breakfast hotel in Canterbury, Kent, England in 2005.

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Cantona (archaeological site)

Cantona (La casa del sol) is a Mesoamerican archaeological site in Mexico.

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Canyon

A canyon (Spanish: cañón; archaic British English spelling: cañon) or gorge is a deep cleft between escarpments or cliffs resulting from weathering and the erosive activity of a river over geologic timescales.

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Canyons of the Ancients National Monument

Canyons of the Ancients National Monument is a national monument protecting an archaeologically-significant landscape located in the southwestern region of the U.S. state of Colorado.

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Canzo

Canzo (in the Italian language, Canz or, in the Lombard language, depending on native or Milanese pronunciation) is a commune of the Italian province of Como.

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Cao Wei (curator)

Cao Wei is a Chinese professor of archaeology.

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Cape Cod Museum of Natural History

The Cape Cod Museum of Natural History is a small museum in Brewster, Massachusetts focusing on natural history and archeology.

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Cape Fonar

Cape Fonar (Мыс Фонарь, Мис Фонар, Fener, Фенер, Παρθένιον) is the easternmost point of the Crimean peninsula.

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Capel, Surrey

Capel is a village and civil parish in southern Surrey, England.

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Caper

Capparis spinosa, the caper bush, also called Flinders rose, is a perennial plant that bears rounded, fleshy leaves and large white to pinkish-white flowers.

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Capillaria hepatica

Capillaria hepatica is a parasitic nematode which causes hepatic capillariasis in rodents and numerous other mammal species, including humans.

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Capitoline Museums

The Capitoline Museums (Italian: Musei Capitolini) are a single museum containing a group of art and archaeological museums in Piazza del Campidoglio, on top of the Capitoline Hill in Rome, Italy.

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Capra (genus)

Capra is a genus of mammals, the goats, composed of up to nine species, including the wild goat, the markhor, and several species known as ibex.

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Captain Euro

Captain Euro is a fictional comic book-style superhero character, created in 1999 as a way to promote the European Union, and specifically the Euro, the single European currency that arrived in 2002.

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Carajía

Carajía or Karijia is an archaeological site in the Utcubamba Valley, located 48 km northeast of the city of Chachapoyas, Peru in Luya Province, Amazonas Region, where eight Chachapoyan mummies were discovered on the cliffside, referred to by local residents as the “ancient wise men”.

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Carapax

Carapax is a fictional supervillain published by DC Comics.

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Carballo

Carballo is a municipality in the north western region of Spain in the Province of A Coruña, the second-largest city in the Autonomous community of Galicia, Spain and seventeenth overall in the country.

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Cardadeu Tomàs Balvey Museum-Archive

The Cardadeu Tomàs Balvey Museum-Archive (Museu-Arxiu Tomàs Balvey), in Cardedeu, Vallès Oriental, is organised around the legacy of Tomàs Balvey i Bas (1865–1954), the last of a line of apothecaries in Cardedeu.

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Cardale Babington

Charles Cardale Babington (23 November 1808 – 22 July 1895) was an English botanist and archaeologist.

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Cardiccia

Cardiccia is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Cardiff

Cardiff (Caerdydd) is the capital of, and largest city in, Wales, and the eleventh-largest city in the United Kingdom.

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Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw

Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw (Uniwersytet Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego w Warszawie) is a state university in Warsaw.

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Carenza Lewis

Professor Carenza Rachel Lewis MA ScD (born 30 November 1963) is a British academic archaeologist and television presenter.

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Caribbean Journal of Science

The Caribbean Journal of Science is a triannual peer-reviewed scientific journal publishing articles, research notes, and book reviews related to science in the Caribbean, with an emphasis on botany, zoology, ecology, conservation biology, geology, archaeology, and paleontology.

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Carinate

Carinate is a shape in pottery, glassware and artistic design usually applied to amphorae or vases.

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Carl Bovallius

Carl Erik Alexander Bovallius (or Bowallius) (31 July 1849 – 8 November 1907) was a Swedish biologist and archaeologist.

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Carl Henrik Langebaek

Carl Henrik Langebaek Rueda (Bogotá, 1961) is a Colombian anthropologist, archaeologist and historian.

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Carl Humann

Carl Humann (first name also Karl, born 4 January 1839 in Steele, part of today’s Essen - Germany; † 12 April 1896 in Smyrna, today İzmir - Turkey) was a German engineer, architect and archaeologist.

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Carl Oesterley

Carl Wilhelm Friedrich Oesterley (22 June 1805 – 29 March 1891) was a German painter and art historian.

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Carl Robert

Carl (Karl) Georg Ludwig Theodor Herwig Joseph Robert (8 March 1850, Marburg – 17 January 1922, Halle an der Saale) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.

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Carl Robert Ehrström

Carl Robert Ehrström (1803–1881) was a Finnish medical doctor, bacteriologist and archaeologist.

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Carl Schuchhardt

Carl Schuchhardt (August 6, 1859 – December 7, 1943) was a German archaeologist and museum director.

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Carl Vilhelm Hartman

Carl Vilhelm Hartman (19 August 1862 – 19 June 1941), was a Swedish botanist and anthropologist.

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Carl Watzinger

Carl Watzinger (9 June 1877 in Darmstadt – 8 December 1948 in Tübingen) was a German-born archaeologist, who with Ernst Sellin, worked on uncovering the site of the ancient city of Jericho (1907–09), and earlier, with Heinrich Kohl (1877–1914), conducted excavations at Capernaum (1905).

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Carl Whiting Bishop

Carl Whiting Bishop (July 12, 1881 – June 16, 1942) was an American archeologist who specialized in East Asian civilizations.

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Carlo Anti

Carlo Anti (April 28, 1889 – June 9, 1961) was an archaeologist and an officer in the army in the First World War and until 1922.

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Carlo Fea

Carlo Fea (4 June 1753 - 18 March 1836) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Carlo Giuseppe Guglielmo Botta

Carlo Giuseppe Guglielmo Botta (November 6, 1766, San Giorgio Canavese, PiedmontAugust 10, 1837, Paris) was an Italian historian.

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Carlos Aguilar Piedra

Carlos Aguilar Piedra (August 24, 1917 - March 31, 2008) was a prominent Costa Rican archaeologist on the faculty of the University of Costa Rica.

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Carlos Barrios

Carlos Barrios is an Australian artist, born Carlos Manuel Barrios Rosa in 1966 in San Salvador, El Salvador, Central America.

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Carlow County Museum

Carlow County Museum (Músaem Chontae Cheatharlach) is a county museum documenting the history of County Carlow.

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Carlyle Greenwell

Carlyle Greenwell (16 March 1884 – 7 February 1961) was an Australian architect whose houses, designed in the first half of the 20th century, are often heritage-listed.

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Carnmenellis

Carnmenellis Hill (or just Carnmenellis) gives its name to the area of west Cornwall in England, between Redruth, Helston and Penryn.

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Caroline Dormon

Caroline Coroneos Dormon, also known as Carrie Dormon (July 19, 1888 – November 21, 1971), was an American botanist, horticulturist, ornithologist, historian, archeologist, preservationist, naturalist, conservationist, and author from Louisiana.

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Caroline Lawrence

Caroline Lawrence (born 1954) is an English American author, best known for The Roman Mysteries series of historical novels for children.

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Caroline Malone

Caroline Malone (born 10 October 1957) is a British academic and archaeologist, currently Professor of Prehistory at Queen's University, Belfast School of Natural and Built Environment, and formerly Senior Tutor of Hughes Hall, Cambridge, UK.

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Carolyn M. Heighway

Carolyn Mary Heighway MA FSA (Born 1943) is an Archaeological Consultant to Gloucester Cathedral and the owner, with her husband Richard Maurice Bryant, of Past Historic, a company which specialises in the design and production of archaeological books and journals as well as exhibitions.

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Carolyn Raffensperger

Carolyn E. Raffensperger is an environmental lawyer and the executive director of the Science & Environmental Health Network, as well as being a leading expert on the Precautionary Principle.

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Carp's Tongue complex

In archaeology, the Carp's Tongue complex refers to a tradition of metal working from south eastern England to the later Bronze Age.

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Carrowkeel Megalithic Cemetery

The Carrowkeel tombs are an ancient passage tomb cemetery in southern County Sligo, Ireland.

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Cartagena, Colombia

The city of Cartagena, known in the colonial era as Cartagena de Indias (Cartagena de Indias), is a major port founded in 1533, located on the northern coast of Colombia in the Caribbean Coast Region.

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Cartaya

Cartaya is a Spanish locality and municipality in the Province of Huelva (autonomous community of Andalusia).

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Carter's Grove

Carter's Grove, also known as Carter's Grove Plantation, is a plantation located on the north shore of the James River in the Grove Community of southeastern James City County in the Virginia Peninsula area of the Hampton Roads region of Virginia in the United States.

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Casa Presidencial (El Salvador)

Casa Presidencial, or "Presidential House" in the Spanish language, is the President of El Salvador's official residence and his offices.

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Casimir

Casimir is an English, French and Latin form of the Polish name Kazimierz.

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Casimir Roumeguère

Casimir Roumeguère (15 August 1828 in Toulouse – 29 February 1892 in Toulouse) was a French botanist and mycologist.

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Caspar Reuvens

Caspar Jacob Christiaan Reuvens (22 January 1793 – 26 July 1835) was a Dutch historian and archaeologist.

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Cast iron

Cast iron is a group of iron-carbon alloys with a carbon content greater than 2%.

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Casteddu di Puzzonu

Casteddu di Puzzonu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Casteddu di Tappa

Casteddu di Tappa is a Bronze Age archaeological site of the Torréen Culture, in Corsica.

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Castell Dinas Brân

Castell Dinas Brân is a medieval castle occupying a prominent hilltop site above the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, Wales.

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Castell Henllys

Castell Henllys (Welsh, "castle of the old court") is an important archaeological site in north Pembrokeshire, Wales, between Newport and Cardigan.

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Castineta

Castineta is a commune in the Haute-Corse department of France on the island of Corsica.

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Castle

A castle (from castellum) is a type of fortified structure built during the Middle Ages by predominantly the nobility or royalty and by military orders.

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Castle Fraser

Castle Fraser is the most elaborate Z-plan castle in Scotland and one of the grandest 'Castles of Mar'.

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Castle of Castielfabib

The Castle of Castielfabib is a castle in the Royal Village of Castielfabib, municipality of the comarca of the Rincón de Ademuz, in the Valencia province, Valencian Community (Spain).

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Castles in Great Britain and Ireland

Castles have played an important military, economic and social role in Great Britain and Ireland since their introduction following the Norman invasion of England in 1066.

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Castleshaw Roman Fort

Castleshaw Roman fort was a castellum in the Roman province of Britannia.

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Casto Innocenzio Ansaldi

Casto Innocenzio Ansaldi (7 March 1710, Piacenza, Italy—1780, Turin) was an Italian professor, theologian and archaeologist.

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Castra of Costești

The castra of Costești was a fort in the Roman province of Dacia.

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Castro of Monte Valinhas

The Castro of Monte Valinhas, alternately the Castro of São João de Valinhas, is an archaeological site in Portugal, in the civil parish of Santa Eulália, in the municipality of Arouca, notable for the discovery of important traces of human remains from the last 2000 years.

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Catacombs of Rome

The Catacombs of Rome (Catacombe di Roma) are ancient catacombs, underground burial places under Rome, Italy, of which there are at least forty, some discovered only in recent decades.

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Caterham

Caterham is a town in the Tandridge District of Surrey, England.

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Caterina Magni

Caterina Magni (born 1966) is an Italian-born French archaeologist and anthropologist, who specialises in the study of pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica, and in particular the iconography, art and mythology and religion of the Olmec civilization.

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Catherine Fisher

Catherine Fisher (born 1957) is a Welsh poet and children's novelist who writes in English.

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Catherine Johns

Catherine Johns (born 1941) is a British archaeologist and museum curator.

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Catherine Morgan

Catherine Anne Morgan, (born 1961) is a British academic specialising in the history and archaeology of Early Iron Age and Archaic Greece.

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Cathy Olkin

Cathy Olkin is a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute, focusing on the outer solar system.

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CATUAV

CATUAV S.L. is a technology-based private company that offers aerial services using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV).

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Cauria

Cauria is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Causantín mac Cináeda

Causantín or Constantín mac Cináeda (in Modern Gaelic: Còiseam mac Choinnich; died 877) was a king of the Picts.

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Causewayed enclosure

A causewayed enclosure is a type of large prehistoric earthwork common to the early Neolithic in Europe.

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Cave Diving Group

The Cave Diving Group (CDG) is a United Kingdom-based diver training organisation specialising in cave diving.

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Cave of Altamira

The Cave of Altamira (Cueva de Altamira) located near the historic town Santillana del Mar in Cantabria, Spain, is renowned for its numerous parietal cave paintings featuring charcoal drawings and polychrome paintings of contemporary local fauna and human hands, created during the Upper Paleolithic.

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Cave of Aroeira

The Cave of Aroeira is an archaeological and paleoanthropological site in the central limestone massif of the Portuguese Estremadura.

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Cave of the Lakes

The Cave of the Lakes is located near the village Kastria in the Achaea regional unit.

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Cave painting

Cave paintings, also known as parietal art, are painted drawings on cave walls or ceilings, mainly of prehistoric origin, beginning roughly 40,000 years ago (around 38,000 BCE) in Eurasia.

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Caves in Devon

(DevonSS), established in 1947, is the oldest club in Devon.

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Caves of King Cintolo

The Caves of King "Cintolo" (also Covas do Rei Cintolo, Spanish: Cueva del Rey Cintolo) are a group of caves, of more than 7,500 meters length, in the outskirts of the City of Mondoñedo, Spain.

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Caves of Nanumanga

Caves of Nanumanga is an underwater cave off the northern shore of Nanumanga, Tuvalu in western Polynesia.

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Cavetto

A cavetto is a concave moulding with a regular curved profile that is part of a circle, widely used in architecture as well as furniture, picture frames, metalwork and other decorative arts.

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Cäcilia Rentmeister

Cäcilia (Cillie) Rentmeister (born 1948 in Berlin) is a German art historian, culture scientist and researcher of cultural conditions of women and of gender.

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Céide Fields

The Céide Fields is an archaeological site on the north County Mayo coast in the west of Ireland, about 7 kilometres northwest of Ballycastle.

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Ceccia

Ceccia is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Cedar Key, Florida

Cedar Key is a city in Levy County, Florida, United States.

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Cedar-Bank Works

Cedar-Bank Works is group of Adena culture earthworks located in Ross County, Ohio in the United States.

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Celal Şahin

Celal Şahin (22 May 1925 – 23 February 2018) was a Turkish musician playing the accordion, humorist, television talk show host and actor.

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Celebration Park

Celebration Park is an archaeological park in the western United States, located in southwestern Idaho.

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Celt (tool)

In archaeology, a celt is a long, thin, prehistoric, stone or bronze tool similar to an adze, a hoe or axe-like tool.

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Celtic animism

According to classical sources, the ancient Celts were animists.

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Celtic Manor Resort

Celtic Manor Resort is a golf, spa and leisure hotel and resort in Newport, South East Wales.

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Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism

Celtic Reconstructionist Paganism (also Celtic Reconstructionism or CR) is a polytheistic reconstructionist approach to Celtic neopaganism, emphasising historical accuracy over eclecticism such as is found in many forms of Neo-druidism.

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Centennial Museum and Chihuahuan Desert Gardens

The Centennial Museum and Chihuahuan Desert Gardens is a cultural history and natural history museum on the campus of the University of Texas at El Paso in El Paso, Texas, United States.

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Center for Art and Archaeology

Center for Art and Archaeology is an archive and research center based in India for the study of South Asian art and archaeology.

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Center for Ocean Exploration and Archaeological Oceanography

The Center for Ocean Exploration and Archaeological Oceanography is a research program for students at the University of Rhode Island's Graduate School of Oceanography.

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Center for the Study of the American South

The Center for the Study of the American South (CSAS) is an academic organization dedicated to the study of "southern history, literature, and culture as well as ongoing social, political, and economic issues" at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Central Catholic Library

The Central Catholic Library (Leabharlann an Chreidimh) is a library located in Dublin, Ireland.

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Central place foraging

Central place foraging (CPF) theory is an evolutionary ecology model for analyzing how an organism can maximize foraging rates while traveling through a patch (a discreet resource concentration), but maintains the key distinction of a forager traveling from a home base to a distant foraging location rather than simply passing through an area or travelling at random.

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Centre d'Enseignement Français en Afghanistan

The Centre d'Enseignement Français en Afghanistan (CEFA) consists of two Franco-Afghan schools in the center of Kabul, Afghanistan, together educating around 6,000 Afghan students.

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Century Rain

Century Rain is a 2004 noir science fiction alternate history mystery novel by Welsh author Alastair Reynolds.

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Ceram Prize

The Ceram Prize (Ceram-Preis) is a prize for non-fiction books in archaeology issued by Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn.

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Ceramic art

Ceramic art is art made from ceramic materials, including clay.

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Ceramic building material

Ceramic building material, often abbreviated to CBM, is an umbrella term used in archaeology to cover all building materials made from baked clay.

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Ceramic petrography

Ceramic petrography (or ceramic petrology) is a laboratory-based scientific archaeological technique that examines the mineralogical and microstructural composition of ceramics and other inorganic materials under the polarised light microscope in order to interpret aspects of the provenance and technology of artefacts.

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Ceratotherium mauritanicum

Ceratotherium mauritanicum is a species of fossil African rhinoceros found in the Late Pliocene to earliest Holocene of Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria.

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Cercam

The CERCAM is an international research center founded in 1990 at the Université Paul Valéry of Montpellier (France) through the association of several research groups.

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Cerne Abbas Giant

The Cerne Abbas Giant is a hill figure near the village of Cerne Abbas in Dorset, England.

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Cernuella

Cernuella is a genus of small air-breathing land snails, pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Hygromiidae, the hairy snails and their allies.

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Cernuella virgata

Cernuella virgata, also known as Helicella virgata, common name, the "vineyard snail", is a species of small, air-breathing land snail, a pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Hygromiidae, the hairy snails and their allies.

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Cerro Pátapo ruins

The Cerro Pátapo ruins or Northern Wari ruins are the remains of an entire prehistoric city relatively near the site of present-day Chiclayo, Peru.

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Cerro Quiac

Cerro Quiac (K'iaq and K'iaqb'al in the K'iche language) is a small Maya archaeological site located at an altitude of, overlooking the Plains of Urbina in the Guatemalan Highlands.

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Cerutti Mastodon site

The Cerutti Mastodon site is a paleontological and possible archeological site located in San Diego County, California.

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Cesana Pariol

Cesana Pariol was the venue for bobsled, luge and skeleton during the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.

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Ceylon Journal of Science

The Ceylon Journal of Science is an open access peer-reviewed scientific journal established in 1924 by the Government of Ceylon.

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Cezar Bolliac

Cezar Bolliac or Boliac, Boliak (March 23, 1813 – February 25, 1881) was a Wallachian and Romanian radical political figure, amateur archaeologist, journalist and Romantic poet.

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Chaa Creek

Chaa Creek is a tributary of the Macal River in the Cayo District in western Belize.

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Chaîne opératoire

Chaîne opératoire (French for “operational chain” or “operational sequence”) is a term used throughout anthropological discourse, but is most commonly used in archaeology and sociocultural anthropology.

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Chacchoben

Chacchoben (chak-CHO-ben; Maya for "the place of red corn") is a Mayan ruin approximately 110 mi (177 km) south of Tulum and 7 mi (11 km) from the village from which it derives its name.

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Chad under Félix Malloum

The 1975 coup d'état in Chad that terminated Tombalbaye's government received an enthusiastic response in the capital N'Djamena.

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Chalcatzingo

Chalcatzingo is a Mesoamerican archaeological site in the Valley of Morelos dating from the Formative Period of Mesoamerican chronology.

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Chalcolithic

The Chalcolithic (The New Oxford Dictionary of English (1998), p. 301: "Chalcolithic /,kælkəl'lɪθɪk/ adjective Archaeology of, relating to, or denoting a period in the 4th and 3rd millennium BCE, chiefly in the Near East and SE Europe, during which some weapons and tools were made of copper. This period was still largely Neolithic in character. Also called Eneolithic... Also called Copper Age - Origin early 20th cent.: from Greek khalkos 'copper' + lithos 'stone' + -ic". χαλκός khalkós, "copper" and λίθος líthos, "stone") period or Copper Age, in particular for eastern Europe often named Eneolithic or Æneolithic (from Latin aeneus "of copper"), was a period in the development of human technology, before it was discovered that adding tin to copper formed the harder bronze, leading to the Bronze Age.

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Chalice Well

The Chalice Well, also known as the Red Spring, is a well situated at the foot of Glastonbury Tor in the county of Somerset, England.

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Challenger (video game)

is a video game developed and published by Hudson Soft in 1985 for the Nintendo Famicom.

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Chamberlin Springs

Chamberlin Springs is a former recreational site outside of Beloit, Wisconsin, United States, that is now property of Beloit College.

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Chan Chan

Chan Chan, the largest city of the pre-Columbian era in South America, is now an archaeological site in La Libertad Region west of Trujillo, Peru.

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Chandayan

Chandayan is a village in Baghpat district in the state of Uttar Pradesh in India, around 100 kilometers from Delhi.

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Chandraketugarh

Chandraketugarh is an archaeological site located beside the Bidyadhari river, about north-east of Kolkata, India, in the district of North 24 parganas, near the township of Berachampa and the Harua Road railhead.

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Chandravalli

Chandravalli is an archaeological site located in the Chitradurga district of the state of Karnataka, India.

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Chania

Chania (Χανιά,, Venetian: Canea, Ottoman Turkish: Hanya) is the second largest city of Crete and the capital of the Chania regional unit.

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Characters of Sluggy Freelance

This is a list of major characters from the webcomic Sluggy Freelance.

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Characters of StarCraft

Major and recurring characters from the military science fiction series StarCraft are listed below, organised by respective species and most commonly affiliated faction within the fictional universe.

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Characters of the Cthulhu Mythos

The following characters appear in H.P. Lovecraft's story cycle — the Cthulhu Mythos.

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Charito

Charito (mid 4th century CE) was a Roman Empress, consort of Jovian, Roman Emperor.

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Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg

Abbé Charles-Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg (8 September 1814 – 8 January 1874) was a noted French writer, ethnographer, historian and archaeologist.

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Charles Barthélemy

Charles Barthélemy (Paris, 1825 – 1888) was a 19th-century French historian and archaeologist.

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Charles Berlitz

Charles Frambach Berlitz (November 23, 1913 – December 18, 2003) was an American linguist and language teacher known for his language-learning courses and his books on paranormal phenomena.

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Charles Boutell

Charles Boutell (1 August 1812 – 31 July 1877) was an English archaeologist, antiquary and clergyman, publishing books on brasses, arms and armour and heraldry, often illustrated by his own drawings.

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Charles C. Di Peso

Charles Corradino Di Peso (October 20, 1920 Missouri, U.S. – 1982) was an American archaeologist.

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Charles Conrad Abbott

Charles Conrad Abbott (June 4, 1843 – July 27, 1919) was an American archaeologist and naturalist.

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Charles Cutler Torrey

Charles Cutler Torrey (20 December 1863 – 12 November 1956) was an American historian, archeologist and scholar who presented manuscripturial evidence to support alternate views on Christian and Islamic religious sources and origins.

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Charles Dawson

Charles Dawson (11 July 1864 – 10 August 1916) was a British amateur archaeologist, who was initially credited with, and is now blamed for, discoveries that turned out to be imaginative frauds, climaxing with that of the Piltdown Man (Eoanthropus dawsoni), which he presented in 1912.

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Charles Edward Borden

Charles Edward Borden; also Carl Borden; (15 May 1905 – 25 December 1978) was an American- born Canadian professor of archaeology at the University of British Columbia and the author of seminal works on archaeology, pre-history and pre-contact history.

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Charles Ernest Beulé

Beulé's grave at the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris Charles Ernest Beulé (29 June 1826 – 4 April 1874) was a French archaeologist and politician.

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Charles Fellows

Sir Charles Fellows (August, 1799 – 8 November 1860) was a British archaeologist and explorer, known for his numerous expeditions in what is present-day Turkey.

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Charles H. Fairbanks

Charles Herron Fairbanks (June 3, 1913 – July 17, 1984) was an archaeologist/anthropologist.

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Charles Hapgood

Charles Hutchins Hapgood (May 17, 1904 – December 21, 1982) was an American college professor and author who became one of the best known advocates of the claim of a rapid and recent pole shift with catastrophic results.

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Charles Harrison McNutt

Charles Harrison McNutt (born December 11, 1928 in Denver, Colorado) is an American archaeologist and a scholar of the prehistoric Southeastern United States.

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Charles Higham (archaeologist)

Charles Frank Wandesforde Higham (born 1939) is a British-born New Zealand archaeologist most noted for his work in Southeast Asia.

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Charles L. Feinberg

Charles Lee Feinberg (June 12, 1909 – August 22, 1995) was an American biblical scholar and professor of Semitics and Old Testament.

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Charles Lenormant

Charles Lenormant (1 June 1802, Paris – 22 November 1859, Athens) was a French archaeologist.

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Charles Lyell

Sir Charles Lyell, 1st Baronet, (14 November 1797 – 22 February 1875) was a Scottish geologist who popularised the revolutionary work of James Hutton.

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Charles M. Carrillo

Charles M. Carrillo (born 1956, Albuquerque, New Mexico) is an American artist, author, and archeologist known particularly for creating art using Spanish colonial techniques that reflect 18th-century Spanish New Mexico.

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Charles Marc-René de Voyer de Paulmy d'Argenson

Charles Marc-René de Voyer de Paulmy d'Argenson (20 April 179631 July 1862), marquis d'Argenson, was a French archaeologist and politician.

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Charles McBurney (archaeologist)

Charles Brian Montagu McBurney (18 June 1914 – 14 December 1979) was an American archaeologist who spent most of his working life in England.

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Charles Phillips (archaeologist)

Charles William Phillips (24 April 1901 – 23 September 1985) was a British archaeologist best known for leading the 1939 excavation of the Sutton Hoo burial ship, an intact collection of Anglo-Saxon grave-goods, possibly that of the 7th-century East Anglian king Raedwald.

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Charles Pickering Bowditch

Charles Pickering Bowditch (30 September 1842 – 1 June 1921) was an American financier, archaeologist, cryptographer and linguistics scholar who specialized in Mayan epigraphy.

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Charles R. Keyes

Charles Reuben Keyes (May 5, 1871 – July 23, 1951) was a pioneering American archaeologist and linguist based in Iowa, known as the founder of modern Iowa archaeology.

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Charles Rau

Charles Rau (1826 Verviers, Belgium – 25 July 1887 Philadelphia) was a United States archaeologist.

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Charles Robert Cockerell

Charles Robert Cockerell (27 April 1788 – 17 September 1863) was an English architect, archaeologist, and writer.

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Charles Seltman

Charles Theodore Seltman PhD (4 August 1886 – 28 June 1957) was an English art historian and writer particularly in the area of numismatics.

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Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau

Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau (19 February 1846 – 15 February 1923) was a noted French Orientalist and archaeologist.

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Charles Texier

Félix Marie Charles Texier (22 August 1802, Versailles – 1 July 1871, Paris) was a French historian, architect and archaeologist.

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Charles Thomas Newton

Sir Charles Thomas Newton KCB (16 September 1816 – 28 November 1894) was a British archaeologist.

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Charles Trick Currelly

Charles Trick Currelly (January 11, 1876 – April 10, 1957) was a Canadian clergyman and archeologist, and the first director of the Royal Ontario Museum from 1914 to 1946.

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Charles Victor Daremberg

Charles Victor Daremberg (14 March 1817, Dijon – 24 October 1872) was a French librarian, medical historian and classical philologist.

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Charles Virolleaud

Jean Charles Gabriel Virolleaud (1879, Barbezieux, Charente – 1968) was a French archaeologist, one of the excavators of Ugarit.

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Charles Waldstein

Sir Charles Waldstein, from 1918 Sir Charles Walston (March 30, 1856 – March 21, 1927) was an Anglo-American archaeologist.

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Charles Wellbeloved

Charles Wellbeloved (6 April 1769 – 29 August 1858) was an English Unitarian divine and archaeologist.

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Charles, Prince of Wales

Charles, Prince of Wales (Charles Philip Arthur George; born 14 November 1948) is the heir apparent to the British throne as the eldest child of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Charles-Alexis-Adrien Duhérissier de Gerville

Charles-Alexis-Adrien Duhérissier de Gerville (Gerville-la-Forêt (Manche) 19 September 1769 — Valognes (Manche) 26 July 1853) was a scholarly French antiquarian, historian, naturalist and archaeologist from an aristocratic family of Normandy.

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Charlotte Blindheim

Charlotte Blindheim, (née Undset, 6 July 1917 – 5 March 2005) was a Norwegian archaeologist.

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Charlotte Booth

Charlotte Booth (born 6 April 1975) is a British Archaeologist & writer on ancient Egypt.

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Charlotte Roberts

Charlotte Ann Roberts, FBA (born 25 May 1957) is a British archaeologist, academic and former nurse.

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Charmian Woodfield

Charmian Woodfield BA DipArch FSA (1929-2014) was a British archaeologist.

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Chartered Institute for Archaeologists

The Chartered Institute for Archaeologists is a professional organisation for archaeologists working in the United Kingdom.

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Chatata

Chatata (pronounced SHAY-tay) is the original Cherokee Indian name of a populated area located in Bradley County, Tennessee.

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Chauvet Cave

The Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc Cave in the Ardèche department of southern France is a cave that contains some of the best-preserved figurative cave paintings in the world, as well as other evidence of Upper Paleolithic life.

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Chácaras

For the style of bags made by some indigenous people in Panama, see Ngobe-Bugle Chácaras are a type of castanets from the Canary Islands.

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Château de Hohenfels

The Château de Hohenfels is a castle situated in the commune of Dambach, in the Bas-Rhin département of France.

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Château de Wildenstein

The Château de Wildenstein is a ruined castle in the Alsace region of France, situated in the commune of Kruth in the Haut-Rhin département.

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Château des Cars

The Château des Cars is a ruined castle at Les Cars in the Limousin region of west France.

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Château Gaillard

Château Gaillard ("Strong Castle") is a ruined medieval castle, located above the commune of Les Andelys overlooking the River Seine, in the Eure département of Normandy, France.

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Chûn Quoit

Chûn Quoit is one of the best preserved of all Neolithic quoits (also called dolmens or cromlechs) in western Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Che Guevara

Ernesto "Che" Guevara (June 14, 1928 – October 9, 1967)The date of birth recorded on was June 14, 1928, although one tertiary source, (Julia Constenla, quoted by Jon Lee Anderson), asserts that he was actually born on May 14 of that year.

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Chebrolu, Guntur district

Chebrolu is a village in Guntur district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

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Cheese

Cheese is a dairy product derived from milk that is produced in a wide range of flavors, textures, and forms by coagulation of the milk protein casein.

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Cheikh Anta Diop

Cheikh Anta Diop (29 December 1923 – 7 February 1986) was a Senegalese historian, anthropologist, physicist, and politician who studied the human race's origins and pre-colonial African culture.

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Chelin, Switzerland

Chelin (pronounce /xәlíṅ/ in patois) is a village of the municipality of Lens in the district of Sierre in Switzerland.

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Chenopodium album

Chenopodium album is a fast-growing weedy annual plant in the genus Chenopodium.

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Chernihiv

Chernihiv (Чернігів) also known as Chernigov (p, Czernihów) is a historic city in northern Ukraine, which serves as the administrative center of the Chernihiv Oblast (province), as well as of the surrounding Chernihiv Raion (district) within the oblast.

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Chernihiv Oblast

Chernihiv Oblast (Чернігівська область, translit. Chernihivs’ka oblast’; also referred to as Chernihivshchyna - Чернігівщина) is an oblast (province) of northern Ukraine.

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Cherry Hinton Hall

Cherry Hinton Hall is a house and park in Cherry Hinton, to the south of Cambridge, England.

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Chert

Chert is a fine-grained sedimentary rock composed of microcrystalline or cryptocrystalline silica, the mineral form of silicon dioxide (SiO2).

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Chertov Ovrag

Chertov Ovrag is an archaeological site on the Russian arctic island of Vrangelya (Wrangel).

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Cherub

A cherub (also pl. cherubim; כְּרוּב kərūv, pl., kərūvîm; Latin cherub, pl. cherubin, cherubim; Syriac ܟܪܘܒܐ; Arabic قروبيين) is one of the unearthly beings who directly attend to God according to Abrahamic religions.

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Chesapeake people

The Chesepian or Chesapeake were a Native American tribe who inhabited the area now known as South Hampton Roads in the U.S. state of Virginia.

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Chesham

Chesham is a market town in the Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, England.

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Chesham Bois

Chesham Bois (traditionally, but now more commonly) is a village in Buckinghamshire, England, adjacent to both Amersham and Chesham.

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Chester Starr

Chester G. Starr (October 5, 1914 in Centralia, Missouri – 22 September 1999 in Ann Arbor, Michigan) was an American historian.

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Chestnuts Long Barrow

The Chestnuts Long Barrow, also known as Stony or Long Warren, is a chambered long barrow located near to the village of Addington in the southeastern English county of Kent.

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Chet Orloff

Chester Lloyd "Chet" Orloff (born February 22, 1949) is a historian, writer and professor in Portland, Oregon, called "one of favorite history teachers" by The Oregonian.

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Chevdar

Chevdar is a Neolithic archeological site near Kazanluk in Bulgaria.

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Chew Stoke

Chew Stoke is a small village and civil parish in the Chew Valley, in Somerset, England, about south of Bristol.

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Chew Valley

The Chew Valley is an area in North Somerset, England, named after the River Chew, which rises at Chewton Mendip, and joins the River Avon at Keynsham.

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Chew Valley Lake

Chew Valley Lake is a large reservoir in the Chew Valley, Somerset, England, and the fifth-largest artificial lake in the United Kingdom (the largest in south-west England), with an area of 1,200 acres (4.9 km²).

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Chi Rho

The Chi Rho (also known as chrismon or sigla) is one of the earliest forms of christogram, formed by superimposing the first two (capital) letters—chi and rho (ΧΡ)—of the Greek word ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ (Christos) in such a way that the vertical stroke of the rho intersects the center of the chi.

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Chia Jani

Chia Jani is an archaeological site in Iran, located along the Qouchemi stream, which flows to the Ravand River about south, in south central part of the Islamabad Plain in the Central-West Zagros Mountains.

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Chiaha

Chiaha was a Native American chiefdom located in the lower French Broad River valley in modern East Tennessee, in the southeastern United States.

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Chickasaw

The Chickasaw are an indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands.

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Chiefdom

A chiefdom is a form of hierarchical political organization in non-industrial societies usually based on kinship, and in which formal leadership is monopolized by the legitimate senior members of select families or 'houses'.

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Chihuahua (dog)

The Chihuahua (chihuahueño) is the smallest breed of dog and is named after the state of Chihuahua in Mexico.

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Chilas

Chilas (چلاس) is a small town located in the Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan on the left side of river Indus.

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Child sacrifice

Child sacrifice is the ritualistic killing of children in order to please or appease a god or supernatural beings in order to achieve a desired result.

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Child sacrifice in pre-Columbian cultures

Tlatelolco. The practice of child sacrifice in Pre-Columbian cultures, in particular Mesoamerican and South American cultures, is well documented both in the archaeological records and in written sources.

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Children of Llullaillaco

The Children of Llullaillaco, also known as the Mummies of Llullaillaco, are three Inca child mummies rediscovered on 16 March 1999 by Dr.

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Chilean National Museum of Natural History

The Chilean National Museum of Natural History (Museo Nacional de Historia Natural or MNHN) is one of three national museums in Chile, along with the Museum of Fine Arts and the National History Museum.

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Chillón River

The Chillón River is a river located in western Peru.

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China Academy of Art

China Academy of Art, also translated as China National Academy of Fine Arts, is a fine arts college under the direct charge of the Ministry of Culture of China.

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China Lake, Kern County, California

China Lake is an unincorporated community in Kern County, California.

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Chinandega

Chinandega is a city and the departmental seat of Chinandega department (4,822.42 km2) in Nicaragua.

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Chinese emigration

Waves of Chinese emigration (also known as the Chinese diaspora) have happened throughout history.

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Chinese knotting

Chinese knotting is a decorative handicraft art that began as a form of Chinese folk art in the Tang and Song dynasty (960–1279 CE) in China.

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Chinese Library Classification

The Chinese Library Classification (CLC), also known as Classification for Chinese Libraries (CCL), is effectively the national library classification scheme in China.

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Chinese mathematics

Mathematics in China emerged independently by the 11th century BC.

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Chinese National Geography

Chinese National Geography is a Chinese monthly magazine similar to the National Geographic Magazine.

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Chini-Bagh

Chini-Bagh was the Kashgar residence of George Macartney, Britain's consul-general and his wife, Lady Catherine Macartney, for 28 years.

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Chinkultic

Chinkultic, sometimes Chincultic, is a moderate-size archeological ruin in the state of Chiapas, Mexico, some 56 km from Comitán, the nearest city.

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Chinua Achebe

Chinua Achebe (born Albert Chinụalụmọgụ Achebe, 16 November 1930 – 21 March 2013) was a Nigerian novelist, poet, professor, and critic.

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Chitimacha

The Chitimacha,also known as Chetimachan or the Sitimacha, are a Federally recognized tribe of Native Americans who live in the U.S. state of Louisiana, mainly on their reservation in St. Mary Parish near Charenton on Bayou Teche.

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Choctaw

The Choctaw (in the Choctaw language, Chahta)Common misspellings and variations in other languages include Chacta, Tchakta and Chocktaw.

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Choo Hoey

Choo Hoey (朱晖, born 20 October 1934, Palembang, Sumatra) is a Singaporean musician and conductor.

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Chopani Mando

Chopanimando is an important Neolithic site which indicates transition of humans from food gathering society to food production society.

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Chopper (archaeology)

Archaeologists define a chopper as a pebble tool with an irregular cutting edge formed through the removal of flakes from one side of a stone.

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Chopper core

In archaeology a chopper core is a suggested type of stone tool created by using a lithic core as a chopper following the removal of flakes from that core.

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Chopping tool

In archaeology a chopping tool is a stone tool.

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Choragic Monument of Lysicrates

Choragic Monument of Lysicrates near the Acropolis of Athens was erected by the choregos Lysicrates, a wealthy patron of musical performances in the Theater of Dionysus, to commemorate the award of first prize in 335/334 BCE to one of the performances he had sponsored.

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Chou Kung-shin

Chou Kung-shin (born April 14, 1947) is a Taiwanese scholar, writer, historian and archaeologist.

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Chowanoke

The Chowanoke, also spelled Chowanoc, are an Algonquian-language American Indian tribe who historically inhabited the coastal area of the Upper South of the United States.

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Chris Gosden

Chris Gosden is a British archaeologist specialising in the archaeology of identity, particularly English identity.

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Chris Judge (archaeologist)

Christopher Judge is an archaeologist at the University of South Carolina Lancaster, whose research focus is the late prehistoric and early historical archaeology of South Carolina and immediately surrounding areas, as well as blues music in South Carolina.

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Chris Kuzneski

Chris Kuzneski (born 1969) is a New York Times bestselling American author.

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Chris Scarre

Christopher John 'Chris' Scarre, FSA is an academic and writer in the fields of archaeology, pre-history and ancient history.

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Christian Gottlob Heyne

Christian Gottlob Heyne (25 September 1729 – 14 July 1812) was a German classical scholar and archaeologist as well as long-time director of the Göttingen State and University Library.

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Christian Jacq

Christian Jacq (born April 28, 1947) is a French author and Egyptologist.

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Christian Jürgensen Thomsen

Christian Jürgensen Thomsen (29 December 1788 – 21 May 1865) was a Danish antiquarian who developed early archaeological techniques and methods.

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Christian Maclagan

Christian Maclagan (1811–10 May 1901) was a Scottish antiquarian and early archaeologist.

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Christian O'Brien

Christian Arthur Edgar "Tim" O'Brien, C.B.E (9 January 1914 – 17 February 2001) was a British exploration geologist and author.

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Christiane Éluère

Christiane Éluère (born 1946, known in English as Christiane Eluère) is a French curator of heritage, archaeologist and historian specialised in the history of the Celts.

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Christianity in Roman Britain

The Abrahamic religion of Christianity was present in Roman Britain from at least the third century until the end of the Roman imperial administration in the early fifth century.

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Christina Lindberg

Britt Christina Marinette Lindberg (born 6 December 1950, in Gothenburg, Sweden) is a Swedish journalist known internationally for her work as an actress and glamour model in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

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Christine Niederberger Betton

Christine Niederberger Betton, born in Bordeaux and died in 2001 in Mexico City, was a French archaeologist.

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Christmas Tree Ruin

The Christmas Tree Ruin is an archaeological site containing a Navajo pueblito, a defensive structure built in a high cliff wall approximately 200 feet above the floor of Gobernador Canyon in northwestern New Mexico, United States.

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Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf

Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf or Christopher von Fürer-Haimendorf (22 June 1909 – 11 June 1995) was an Austrian ethnologist and professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies at London.

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Christophe-Paulin de La Poix de Fréminville

Christophe-Paulin de La Poix, chevalier de Fréminville (24 January 1787Levot, p.195 – 12 January 1848Levot, p.197) was a French Navy Commander, naturalist, and archeologist.

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Christopher C. Fennell

Christopher C. Fennell (born c. 1964) is an American anthropologist and lawyer, an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

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Christopher Chippindale

Christopher Ralph Chippindale, FSA (born 13 October 1951) is a British archaeologist.

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Christopher Gaffney (archaeologist)

Christopher Gaffney (born 14 June 1962) is a British archaeological geophysicist and currently Head of the School of Archaeological and Forensics Sciences at the University of Bradford.

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Christopher Hawkes

Charles Francis Christopher Hawkes, FBA, FSA (5 June 1905 – 29 March 1992) was an English archaeologist specialising in European prehistory.

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Christopher P. Sloan

Christopher P. Sloan (born September 28, 1954) is a science communicator, art director, author, and avocational paleontologist.

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Christopher Tilley

Chris Tilley is a British archaeologist known for his contributions to postprocessualist archaeological theory.

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Christopher Wordsworth

Christopher Wordsworth (30 October 180720 March 1885) was an English bishop in the Anglican Church and man of letters.

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Christos G. Doumas

Christos Georgiou Doumas (Χρήστος Γεωργίου Ντούμας; born 1933), is a Greek archaeology professor at the University of Athens.

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Christos Tsountas

Christos Tsountas (Χρήστος Τσούντας; 1857 – 9 June 1934) was a Greek classical archaeologist.

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Chronological dating

Chronological dating, or simply dating, is the process of attributing to an object or event a date in the past, allowing such object or event to be located in a previously established chronology.

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Chronology

Chronology (from Latin chronologia, from Ancient Greek χρόνος, chrónos, "time"; and -λογία, -logia) is the science of arranging events in their order of occurrence in time.

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Chryssa

Chryssa Vardea-Mavromichali (Χρύσα Βαρδέα-Μαυρομιχάλη; December 31, 1933 – December 23, 2013) was a Greek American artist who worked in a wide variety of media.

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Chukat

Chukat, Hukath, or Chukkas (— Hebrew for "decree," the ninth word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 39th weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the sixth in the Book of Numbers.

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Chukotsky District

Chukotsky District (Чуко́тский райо́н; Chukchi: Чукоткакэн район) is an administrativeLaw #33-OZ and municipalLaw #47-OZ district (raion), one of the six in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia.

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Chumash people

The Chumash are a Native American people who historically inhabited the central and southern coastal regions of California, in portions of what is now San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles counties, extending from Morro Bay in the north to Malibu in the south.

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Chungara (journal)

Chungara Revista de Antropología Chilena (English: The Journal of Chilean Anthropology) is a peer-reviewed academic journal on anthropology and archaeology with particular, but not exclusive, focus on the Andean region.

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Church of Ecce Homo

Church of Ecce Homo or Basilica of Ecce Homo, is a Roman Catholic church on Via Dolorosa in the Old City of Jerusalem, along the path that according to tradition Jesus walked, carrying his cross, on the way to his crucifixion.

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Church of Saint Mary of Eunate

The Church of Saint Mary of Eunate is a 12th-century Romanesque church located about 2 km south-east of Muruzábal, Navarre, Spain, on the Way of Saint James.

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Church of St. Petka in Staničenje

The Church of St.

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Church of the Condemnation

The Church of the Condemnation and Imposition of the Cross is a Roman Catholic church located within the Franciscan compound that also contains the Church of the Flagellation in the old city of Jerusalem.

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Churchill Babington

Churchill Babington (11 March 182112 January 1889) was an English classical scholar, archaeologist and naturalist.

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Cieza, Murcia

Cieza is a town and municipality in Spain, in the autonomous community of Murcia.

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Cinnamon Bay Plantation

Cinnamon Bay Plantation is an approximately property situated on the north central coast of Saint John in the United States Virgin Islands adjacent to Cinnamon Bay.

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Circassians

The Circassians (Черкесы Čerkesy), also known by their endonym Adyghe (Circassian: Адыгэхэр Adygekher, Ады́ги Adýgi), are a Northwest Caucasian nation native to Circassia, many of whom were displaced in the course of the Russian conquest of the Caucasus in the 19th century, especially after the Russian–Circassian War in 1864.

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Cirencester

Cirencester (see below for more variations) is a market town in east Gloucestershire, England, west northwest of London.

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Ciriaco de' Pizzicolli

Ciriaco de' Pizzicolli or Cyriacus of Ancona (31 July 1391 – 1453/55) was a restlessly itinerant Italian humanist and antiquarian who came from a prominent family of merchants in Ancona.

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Citadel of Erbil

The Erbil Citadel, locally called Qalat Erbil (قەڵای ھەولێر Qelay Hewlêr; قلعة أربيل) Assyrian (arbailo)is a tell or occupied mound, and the historical city centre of Erbil in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.

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Citron

The citron (Citrus medica) is a large fragrant citrus fruit with a thick rind.

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City Wall and Moat

City Wall and Moat is located in Beirut, Lebanon.

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CityEngine

Esri CityEngine is a three-dimensional (3D) modeling software application developed by Esri R&D Center Zurich (formerly Procedural Inc.) and is specialized in the generation of 3D urban environments.

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Cival

Cival is an archaeological site in the Petén Basin region of the southern Maya lowlands, which was formerly a major city of the Pre-Columbian Maya civilization.

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Civic Museum of Crema

The Civic Museum of Crema (Italian: Museo civico di Crema e del Cremasco) is an Italian museum, located in Crema.

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Cividade de Terroso

Cividade de Terroso was an ancient city of the Castro culture in North-western coast of the Iberian Peninsula, situated near the present bed of the Ave river, in the suburbs of present-day Póvoa de Varzim, Portugal.

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Civilization V: Brave New World

Sid Meier's Civilization V: Brave New World is the second official expansion pack for the turn-based strategy video game Civilization V. It was released on July 9, 2013 in North America, and on July 12, 2013 in the rest of the world.

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Clactonian

The Clactonian is the name given by archaeologists to an industry of European flint tool manufacture that dates to the early part of the interglacial period known as the Hoxnian, the Mindel-Riss or the Holstein stages (c. 400,000 years ago).

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Cladh Hallan

Cladh Hallan (Cladh Hàlainn) is an archaeological site on the island of South Uist in the Outer Hebrides in Scotland.

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Cladistics

Cladistics (from Greek κλάδος, cládos, i.e., "branch") is an approach to biological classification in which organisms are categorized in groups ("clades") based on the most recent common ancestor.

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Claire Epstein

Claire Epstein (18 September 1911 – 18 August 2000) was an Israeli archaeologist.

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Claire Lalouette

Claire Lalouette is a French Egyptologist, former scientific member of the Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale and Professor at Paris-Sorbonne University.

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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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Clara Lee Tanner

Clara Lee Tanner (May 28, 1905 – December 22, 1997) was an anthropologist known for studies of the arts and crafts of American Indians of the Southwest.

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Clare Island Survey

The Clare island Survey was a multidisciplinary (zoological, botanical, archaeological,and geological) survey of Clare Island an island off the West coast of Ireland.

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Clarence Bloomfield Moore

Clarence Bloomfield Moore (14 January 1852, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – 24 March 1936, St. Petersburg, Florida), more commonly known as C.B. Moore, was an American archaeologist and writer.

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Clarence Van Riet Lowe

Clarence Van Riet Lowe (4 November 1894 – 7 June 1956) was a South African civil engineer and archaeologist.

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Clark Hopkins

Clark Hopkins (New York City, 16 September 1895 – 1976) was an American archaeologist.

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Claud William Wright

Claud William Wright CB (9 January 1917, Ellenborough, Yorkshire, England – 15 February 2010, Burford, Oxfordshire, England), aka Willy Wright, was a senior British civil servant who was also an expert in the disciplines of geology, palaeontology, and archaeology.

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Claude Frédéric-Armand Schaeffer

Claude Frédéric-Armand Schaeffer (March 6, 1898 – August 25, 1982) was a French archeologist, born in Strasbourg, who led the French excavation team that began working on the site of Ugarit, the present day Ras Shamra in 1929, leading to the uncovering of the Ugaritic religious texts.

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Claude Nelson Warren

Claude Nelson Warren (born 1932) is a California Desert anthropologist and specialist in early humans in the Far West and has been instrumental in defining the San Dieguito and La Jolla cultural complexes.

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Claude Seignolle

Claude Seignolle (born in Périgueux in June 25, 1917) is a French author.

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Claude Sosthène Grasset d'Orcet

Claude Sosthene Grasset d'Orcet (6 June 1828 at Aurillac – 2 December 1900 at Cusset) was a French archaeologist, writer, exponent of the esoteric and founder of the study of French mythology.

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Claude-François Baudez

Claude-François Baudez (3 December 1932 – 13 July 2013) was a French Mayanist, archaeologist and iconologist.

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Claw beaker

A claw beaker is a name given by archaeologists to a type of drinking vessel often found as a grave good in 6th and 7th century AD Frankish and Anglo-Saxon burials.

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Clay Pit Ponds State Park Preserve

Clay Pit Ponds State Park Preserve is state park located near the southwestern shore of Staten Island, New York.

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Cleaver (tool)

In archaeology, a cleaver is a type of biface stone tool of the Lower Palaeolithic.

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Clementina Panella

Clementina Panella is an Italian archaeologist, a professor at the University of Rome La Sapienza, where she teaches Methodology of Archaeology.

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Cleveland Abbe

Cleveland Abbe (December 3, 1838 – October 28, 1916) was an American meteorologist and advocate of time zones.

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Cleveland Foundation Centennial Lake Link Trail

The Cleveland Foundation Centennial Lake Link Trail, originally known as the Lake Link Trail, is a cycling, hiking, and walking trail located in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States.

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Cleveland Museum of Natural History

The Cleveland Museum of Natural History is a natural history museum located approximately five miles (8 km) east of downtown Cleveland, Ohio in University Circle, a 550-acre (220 ha) concentration of educational, cultural and medical institutions.

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Cley Marshes

Cley Marshes is a nature reserve on the North Sea coast of England just outside the village of Cley next the Sea, Norfolk.

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Cliff dwelling

In archeology, cliff dwellings are dwellings formed by using niches or caves in high cliffs, with more or less excavation or with additions in the way of masonry.

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Cliff Palace

Cliff Palace is the largest cliff dwelling in North America.

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Clifford House (Eustis, Florida)

The Clifford House (also known as the Clifford-Taylor House) is a historic home in Eustis, Florida, United States.

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Climate change

Climate change is a change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns when that change lasts for an extended period of time (i.e., decades to millions of years).

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Clipstone

Clipstone in north Nottinghamshire is a small ex-coal mining village built on the site of an old army base.

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Clive Gamble

Clive S. Gamble, (born 1951) is a British archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Clive Ruggles

Clive L. N. Ruggles (born 1952) is a British astronomer, archaeologist and academic, regarded as one of the leading figures in the field of archaeoastronomy and the author of numerous academic and popular works on the subject.

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Cloaca Maxima

The Cloaca Maxima (Cloaca Massima) is one of the world's earliest sewage systems.

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Cloonnafinneela, County Kerry

Cloonnafinneela (Cluain na Fionnaíle) is a townland of County Kerry, Ireland.

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Clue Mysteries (book series)

Clue (or Cluedo) Mysteries (sometimes called Clue Mysteries, 15 whodunits to solve in minutes) are two books released in 2003 and 2004 based upon the Clue board game.

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Cluj-Napoca Botanical Garden

The Cluj-Napoca Botanical Garden, officially Alexandru Borza Cluj-Napoca University Botanic Garden (Grădina Botanică Alexandru Borza a Universităţii Cluj-Napoca), is a botanical garden located in the south part of Cluj-Napoca, Romania.

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Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust

The Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust is an Archaeological Trust organisation established in the mid-1970s as part of the Welsh Archaeological Trusts.

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Co-Cathedral of Saint-Antoine-de-Padoue

The Co-Cathedral of Saint-Antoine-de-Padoue (Co-cathédrale Saint-Antoine-de-Padoue) is a co-cathedral in Longueuil, Quebec, Canada, on Montreal's south shore.

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Coats-Hines Site

The Coats-Hines site is an archaeological site located in Williamson County, Tennessee in the Southeastern United States.

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Cochabamba

Cochabamba (Quchapampa, Quchapanpa) is a city & municipality in central Bolivia, in a valley in the Andes mountain range.

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Cochise Tradition

The Cochise Tradition (also Cochise Culture) refers to the southern archeological tradition of the four Southwestern Archaic Traditions, in the present day Southwestern United States.

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Cockburnspath

Cockburnspath is a village in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland.

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Coclé Province

Coclé is a province of central Panama on the nation's southern coast.

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Code of Hammurabi

The Code of Hammurabi is a well-preserved Babylonian code of law of ancient Mesopotamia, dated back to about 1754 BC (Middle Chronology).

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Codex Xolotl

The Codex Xolotl (also known as Codicé Xolotl) is a postconquest cartographic Aztec codex, thought to have originated before 1542.

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Coffin birth

Coffin birth, also known as postmortem fetal extrusion,Lasso et al. 2009.

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Cognitive archaeology

Cognitive archaeology is a theoretical perspective in archaeology which focuses on the ways that ancient societies thought and the symbolic structures that can be perceived in past material culture.

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Coimbra

Coimbra (Corumbriga)) is a city and a municipality in Portugal. The population at the 2011 census was 143,397, in an area of. The fourth-largest urban centre in Portugal (after Lisbon, Porto, Braga), it is the largest city of the district of Coimbra, the Centro region and the Baixo Mondego subregion. About 460,000 people live in the Região de Coimbra, comprising 19 municipalities and extending into an area. Among the many archaeological structures dating back to the Roman era, when Coimbra was the settlement of Aeminium, are its well-preserved aqueduct and cryptoporticus. Similarly, buildings from the period when Coimbra was the capital of Portugal (from 1131 to 1255) still remain. During the Late Middle Ages, with its decline as the political centre of the Kingdom of Portugal, Coimbra began to evolve into a major cultural centre. This was in large part helped by the establishment the University of Coimbra in 1290, the oldest academic institution in the Portuguese-speaking world. Apart from attracting many European and international students, the university is visited by many tourists for its monuments and history. Its historical buildings were classified as a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 2013: "Coimbra offers an outstanding example of an integrated university city with a specific urban typology as well as its own ceremonial and cultural traditions that have been kept alive through the ages.".

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Coinage of Asia

The earliest coinage of Asia is also the oldest coinage of the world.

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Colchester Royal Grammar School

Colchester Royal Grammar School (CRGS) is a state-funded grammar school in Colchester, Essex, founded in 1206 and granted two Royal Charters by Henry VIII (in 1539) and by Elizabeth I (in 1584).

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Coldrum Long Barrow

The Coldrum Long Barrow, also known as the Coldrum Stones and the Adscombe Stones, is a chambered long barrow located near the village of Trottiscliffe in the south-eastern English county of Kent.

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Colfax massacre

The Colfax massacre, or Colfax riot as the events are termed on the 1950 state historic marker, occurred on Easter Sunday, April 13, 1873, in Colfax, Louisiana, the seat of Grant Parish, when approximately 150 black men were murdered by white Southerners.

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Colin Renfrew

Andrew Colin Renfrew, Baron Renfrew of Kaimsthorn, FBA, FSA, Hon FSA Scot (born 25 July 1937 in Stockton-on-Tees) is a British archaeologist, paleolinguist and Conservative peer noted for his work on radiocarbon dating, the prehistory of languages, archaeogenetics, and the prevention of looting at archaeological sites.

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Colin Wells (historian)

Colin Michael Wells (15 November 1933 in West Bridgford – 11 March 2010 in North Wales) was a British historian of ancient Rome, as well as scholar and archaeologist of classical antiquities.

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Collections management (museum)

Collections management involves the development, storage, and preservation of collections and cultural heritage.

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Collier Lodge Site

Located in Porter County, Indiana one of the few places the Kankakee Marsh could be easily crossed.

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Cologne Stadtbahn

The Cologne Stadtbahn is a light rail system in the German city of Cologne, including several surrounding cities of the Cologne Bonn Region (Bergisch Gladbach, Bonn, Bornheim, Brühl, Frechen, Hürth, Leverkusen-Schlebusch, Wesseling).

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Colombian culture

Many aspects of Colombian culture can be traced back to the early culture of Spain of the 16th century and its collision with Colombia's native civilizations (see: Muisca, Tayrona).

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Colombian Institute of Anthropology and History

The Colombian Institute of Anthropology and History (Instituto Colombiano de Antropología e Historia), ICANH, is a scientific and technical government agency ascribed to the Ministry of Culture in charge of researching, producing and disseminating knowledge in the fields of anthropology, archeology and colonial history to protect the archaeological and ethnographic patrimony of Colombia.

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Colonial Williamsburg

Colonial Williamsburg is a living-history museum and private foundation presenting part of an historic district in the city of Williamsburg, Virginia, United States.

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Columbia County, Georgia

Columbia County is a county located in the US state of Georgia.

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Columbia River Gorge

The Columbia River Gorge is a canyon of the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest of the United States.

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Colville, Washington

Colville is a city in Stevens County, Washington, United States.

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Coman of Kinvara

Coman of Kinvara was an early Medieval Irish Saint.

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Comitium

The Comitium (Comizio) was the original open-air public meeting space of Ancient Rome, and had major religious and prophetic significance.

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Committee for the Prevention of Destruction of Antiquities on the Temple Mount

The Committee for the Prevention of Destruction of Antiquities on the Temple Mount is an apolitical group of archaeologists, intellectuals and other prominent individuals from the left and right.

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Common Wealth Award of Distinguished Service

The Common Wealth Awards of Distinguished Service (or Common Wealth Awards) were created under the will of the late Ralph Hayes, an influential American business executive and philanthropist.

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Community

A community is a small or large social unit (a group of living things) that has something in common, such as norms, religion, values, or identity.

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Community archaeology

Community archaeology is archaeology by the people for the people.

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Community studies

Community studies is an academic field drawing on both sociology and anthropology and the social research methods of ethnography and participant observation in the study of community.

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Comoros

The Comoros (جزر القمر), officially the Union of the Comoros (Comorian: Udzima wa Komori, Union des Comores, الاتحاد القمري), is a sovereign archipelago island nation in the Indian Ocean located at the northern end of the Mozambique Channel off the eastern coast of Africa between northeastern Mozambique and northwestern Madagascar.

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Comparative linguistics

Comparative linguistics (originally comparative philology) is a branch of historical linguistics that is concerned with comparing languages to establish their historical relatedness.

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Complex society

In anthropology and archaeology, a complex society is a social formation that is described as a formative or developed state.

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Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres

The Comptes rendus des scéances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres is an academic journal of history, philology, and archeology published by the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.

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Computational archaeology

Computational archaeology describes computer-based analytical methods for the study of long-term human behaviour and behavioural evolution.

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Concelebration

In Christianity, concelebration (from Lat., con + celebrare,to celebrate together) is the presiding of a number of presbyters (priests or ministers) at the celebration of the Eucharist with either a presbyter or bishop as the principal celebrant and the other presbyters and bishops present in the chancel assisting in the consecration of the Eucharist.

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Conflict archaeology

Conflict archaeology is a sub-discipline within archaeology focused on intergroup and intragroup conflict.

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Confronted animals

Confronted animals, or confronted-animal as an adjective, where two animals face each other in a symmetrical pose, is an ancient bilateral motif in art and artifacts studied in archaeology and art history.

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Congress of Roman Frontier Studies

The Congress of Roman Frontier Studies or Limes Congress is one of the most important conferences on Archeology in Europe.

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Conington Prize

The Conington Prize is awarded annually by the University of Oxford.

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Conjectural history

Conjectural history is a type of historiography isolated in the 1790s by Dugald Stewart, who termed it "theoretical or conjectural history", as prevalent in the historians and early social scientists of the Scottish Enlightenment.

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Conjunctive archaeology

Conjunctive archaeology is a method of studying of the past developed by Walter Taylor in the 1940s that combined elements of both traditional archaeology and the allied field of anthropology.

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Conkling Cavern

Conkling Cavern is a paleontological and archaeological site located in Doña Ana County, New Mexico.

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Connecticut Valley Railroad Roundhouse and Turntable Site

The Connecticut Valley Railroad Roundhouse and Turntable Site is a former railroad facility located in Fort Saybrook Monument Park off Main Street in Old Saybrook, Connecticut.

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Conospermum acerosum

Conospermum acerosum, commonly known as needle-leaved smokebush, is a shrub endemic to Western Australia.

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Conquered lorikeet

The conquered lorikeet (Vini vidivici) is a species of parrot that became extinct 700–1300 years ago.

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Conrad Bursian

Conrad Bursian (14 November 1830 – 21 September 1883) was a German philologist and archaeologist.

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Conrad Schick Library

Conrad Schick Library is a small research library located at Christ Church in Jerusalem, Israel.

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Conservation and restoration of human remains

The conservation and restoration of human remains involves the long-term preservation and care of human remains in various forms which exist within museum collections.

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Conservation and restoration of metals

Conservation and restoration of metals is the activity devoted to the protection and preservation of historical (religious, artistic, technical and ethnographic) and archaeological objects made partly or entirely of metal.

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Conservation and restoration of shipwreck artifacts

The conservation and restoration of shipwreck artifacts is the act of caring for cultural heritage that has been part of a shipwreck and have often been underwater for a great length of time.

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Conservation in Belize

Since declaring independence in 1981, Belize has enacted many environmental protection laws aimed at the preservation of the country's natural and cultural heritage, as well as its wealth of natural resources.

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Conservation-restoration of cultural heritage

The conservation-restoration of cultural heritage focuses on protection and care of tangible cultural heritage, including artworks, architecture, archaeology, and museum collections.

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Conspiracy theories about Adolf Hitler's death

Conspiracy theories about Adolf Hitler's death contradict the fact that Adolf Hitler committed suicide in his Führerbunker on 30 April 1945.

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Constanța

Constanța (Κωνστάντζα or Κωνστάντια, Konstantia, Кюстенджа or Констанца, Köstence), historically known as Tomis (Τόμις), is the oldest continuously inhabited city in Romania.

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Constantin Daicoviciu

Constantin Daicoviciu (March 1, 1898, Căvăran – May 27, 1973, Cluj-Napoca) was a Romanian historian and archaeologist.

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Constantin Daniel Rosenthal

Constantin Daniel Rosenthal (b. Pest, Austrian Empire: Rosenthal Konstantin, 1820 – July 23, 1851) was a Romanian painter and sculptor of Austrian-Jewish birth and a 1848 revolutionary, best known for his portraits and his choice of Romanian Romantic nationalist subjects.

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Constantin S. Nicolăescu-Plopșor

Constantin S. Nicolăescu-Plopșor or Nicolaescu-Plopșor (April 20, 1900 – May 30, 1968) was a Romanian historian, archeologist, anthropologist and ethnographer, also known as a and folkorist and children's writer, whose diverse activities were primarily focused on his native region of Oltenia.

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Constantine II of Scotland

Constantine, son of Áed (Medieval Gaelic: Constantín mac Áeda; Modern Gaelic: Còiseam mac Aoidh, known in most modern regnal lists as Constantine II; died 952) was an early King of Scotland, known then by the Gaelic name Alba.

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Constantino Manuel Torres

Constantino Manuel Torres, known as Manuel Torres, is an archaeologist and ethnobotanist specialising in the ethnobotany of pre-columbian South America and the Caribbean.

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Constanza Ceruti

María Constanza Ceruti (born 11 January 1973 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is an Argentinian high-altitude archaeologist and anthropologist who has done more than 80 field surveys, most of them with National Geographic teams in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru.

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Consuelo Mata Parreño

Consuelo Mata Parreño (born 1954, Castelló de la Plana) is a Spanish archaeologist who specialises in Iberian material culture.

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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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Contributing property

In the law regulating historic districts in the United States, a contributing property or contributing resource is any building, object, or structure which adds to the historical integrity or architectural qualities that make the historic district, listed locally or federally, significant.

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Convent of the Sisters of Zion

The Convent of the Sisters of Zion is a convent of the Congregation of Notre-Dame de Sion, located near to the eastern end of the Via Dolorosa, in Jerusalem.

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Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act

The Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act (also known as CCPIA, or CPIA) is a United States Act of Congress that became law in 1983.

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Convoys Wharf

Convoys Wharf, formerly called the King's Yard, is the site of Deptford Dockyard, the first of the Royal Dockyards, built on a riverside site in Deptford, by the River Thames in London.

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Cooper Bison Kill Site

The Cooper Bison Kill Site is an archaeological site near Fort Supply in Harper County, Oklahoma, United States.

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Coosa chiefdom

The Coosa chiefdom was a powerful Native American paramount chiefdom in what are now Gordon and Murray counties in Georgia, in the United States.

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Copenhagen

Copenhagen (København; Hafnia) is the capital and most populous city of Denmark.

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Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs

The Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs (formerly the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies) was founded in 1946 as part of the Institute of Advanced Studies at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory.

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Cord rig

Cord rig is the name given by archaeologists to a system of cultivation practiced in prehistoric and later upland Britain.

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Corfu Channel incident

The Corfu Channel Incident consists of three separate events involving Royal Navy ships in the Channel of Corfu which took place in 1946, and it is considered an early episode of the Cold War.

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Coricancha

Coricancha, Koricancha, Qoricancha or Qorikancha (from Quechua quri gold; kancha enclosure) was the most important temple in the Inca Empire.

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Corinthian helmet

The Corinthian helmet originated in ancient Greece and took its name from the city-state of Corinth.

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Corinto, Morazán

Corinto is a municipality in the Morazán department of El Salvador.

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Cornelia Horsford

Cornelia Horsford (1861–1941?) was an American archaeologist and writer whose work focused on the Norse settlement of Vinland and other possible traces of early Norse exploration and settlement of North America, especially in Massachusetts.

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Cornelis Marinus Pleyte

Cornelis Marinus Pleyte (usually, C.M. Pleyte) (24 June 1863 in Leiden – 22 July 1917 in Batavia) was a Dutch museum curator, Dutch East Indies subject-matter expert, teacher, and author.

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Cornelius Cosgrove

Cornelius Burton ("Burt") Cosgrove (18751936) was an archaeologist trained in the Southwestern United States.

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Cornish people

The Cornish people or Cornish (Kernowyon) are an ethnic group native to, or associated with Cornwall: and a recognised national minority in the United Kingdom, which can trace its roots to the ancient Britons who inhabited southern and central Great Britain before the Roman conquest.

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Cornus, Sardinia

Cornus was an ancient Punic-Roman town of Sardinia near Cuglieriand the location, during the revolt of Hampsicora, of a battle between a Sardinian army and the Roman Republic.

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Cornwall Archaeological Society

Cornwall Archaeological Society is an amateur archaeological society based in Cornwall, United Kingdom for the study of archaeology in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.

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Corona (satellite)

The Corona program was a series of American strategic reconnaissance satellites produced and operated by the Central Intelligence Agency Directorate of Science & Technology with substantial assistance from the U.S. Air Force.

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Corotoman

Corotoman was a 17th and 18th century plantation on the Rappahannock River in Lancaster County, Virginia, United States.

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Corrado Melfi

Corrado Melfi, Baron of St.

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Cortex (archaeology)

In lithic analysis in archaeology the cortex is the outer layer of rock formed on the exterior of raw materials by chemical and mechanical weathering processes.

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Cosimo De Giorgi

Cosimo De Giorgi or Arcangelo Cosimo De Giorgi (Lizzanello, 9 February 1842 – Lecce, 22 December 1922) was an Italian scientist.

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Cosmeston Medieval Village

Cosmeston Medieval Village is a "living history" medieval village near Lavernock in the Vale of Glamorgan not far from Penarth and Cardiff in south Wales.

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Cosmic ray

Cosmic rays are high-energy radiation, mainly originating outside the Solar System and even from distant galaxies.

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Coso people

The Coso people are an indigenous people of the Americas and Native American tribe associated with the Coso Range in the Mojave Desert of California in the southwestern United States.

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Coso Rock Art District

Coso Rock Art District, containing the Big and Little Petroglyph Canyons, is a rock art site containing over 100,000 Paleo-Indian and/or Native American Petroglyphs.

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Coso Volcanic Field

The Coso Volcanic Field is located in Inyo County, California, at the western edge of the Basin and Range geologic province and northern region of the Mojave Desert.

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Costa Maya

Costa Maya is a small tourist region in the municipality of Othón P. Blanco in the state of Quintana Roo, Mexico, the only state bounded by the Caribbean Sea to its east.

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Costa Smeralda

The Costa Smeralda (Monti di Mola, Montes de Mola) is a coastal area and tourist destination in northern Sardinia, Italy, with a length of some 20 km, although the term originally designated only a small stretch in the commune of Arzachena.

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Cottage and small scale industries in Pakistan

In Pakistan, cottage or household industries hold an important position in rural set-up.

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Cotzumalhuapa

Santa Lucía Cotzumalhuapa (or Cotzumalguapa) is the name of a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological zone dating mainly to the Late Classic period in Mesoamerican chronology, although it was occupied since the Middle Preclassic period and there is evidence of a major development during the Late Preclassic period.

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Council for British Research in the Levant

The Council for British Research in the Levant (CBRL) is a non-profit organisation that promotes humanities and social science research in the Levant.

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Count Johann Nepomuk Wilczek

Count Johann (Hans) Nepomuk Wilczek (Hans Graf Wilczek; 7 December 1837 – 27 January 1922) was an Austrian arctic explorer and patron of the arts.

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Count per Liter

Count (or number) per liter is used to measure number density in a variety of domains.

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Count Saint-Germain (vampire)

The Count Saint-Germain is a fictional character from a series of novels written by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro.

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County Line Branch

County Line Branch (also known as the County Line Branch of Chillisquaque Creek) is a tributary of West Branch Chillisquaque Creek in Northumberland County and Montour County, in Pennsylvania, in the United States.

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Couscous

Couscous is a Maghrebi dish of small (about diameter) steamed balls of crushed durum wheat semolina that is traditionally served with a stew spooned on top.

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Coventina

Coventina was a Romano-British goddess of wells and springs.

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Cowboy Wash

Cowboy Wash is a group of 9 archaeological sites used by Ancient Puebloans (the Anasazi) in Montezuma County, southwestern Colorado, United States.

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Coy, Spain

Coy is a town within the municipality of Lorca, in the Spanish province of Murcia.

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Coyote Hills Regional Park

Coyote Hills Regional Park is a regional park encompassing nearly 978 acres of land and administered by the East Bay Regional Park District.

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Cradle of civilization

The term "cradle of civilization" refers to locations where, according to current archeological data, civilization is understood to have emerged.

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Craigflower Manor and Schoolhouse

The Craigflower Manor and Craigflower Schoolhouse are National Historic Sites of Canada located in View Royal, British Columbia (the Manor) and Saanich (the Schoolhouse) near Victoria.

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Craiglethy

Craiglethy (Scottish Gaelic: Creag Liathach - meaning grey rock) is a small island/skerry off Fowlsheugh on the east coast of Aberdeenshire, Scotland in the North Sea.

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Cranborne Chase

Cranborne Chase is a chalk plateau in central southern England, straddling the counties Dorset, Hampshire and Wiltshire.

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Cranmore Castle

Cranmore Castle is an Iron Age earthworkR.

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Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve

Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve is a U.S. National Monument and national preserve in the Snake River Plain in central Idaho.

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Crawford State Park (Kansas)

Crawford State Park is a state park in Crawford County, Kansas, United States, located north of Girard.

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Crawton

Crawton is a former fishing community on the southeast Aberdeenshire coast in Scotland, deserted since 1927.

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Creation Evidence Museum

The Creation Evidence Museum of Texas, originally Creation Evidences Museum,, by Kaylois Henry, Dallas Observer, December 12, 1996.

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Crete

Crete (Κρήτη,; Ancient Greek: Κρήτη, Krḗtē) is the largest and most populous of the Greek islands, the 88th largest island in the world and the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, Sardinia, Cyprus, and Corsica.

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Creve Coeur, Missouri

Creve Coeur is a city located in west St. Louis County, Missouri, United States, a part of Greater St. Louis.

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Crewkerne Castle

Crewkerne Castle (which is also known as Castle Hill or Croft Castle) was possibly a Norman motte and bailey castle on a mound that is situated north-west of the town of Crewkerne in Somerset, England.

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Criel Mound

The Criel Mound, also known as the South Charleston Mound, is a Native American burial mound located in South Charleston, West Virginia, USA.

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CRISES

Laboratoire CRISES (or Centre de recherches interdisciplinaires en sciences humaines et sociales) is a French research centre in humanities and social sciences, founded in Montpellier, France, in January 2009.

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Criticism of Mormon sacred texts

The Latter Day Saints (full name: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints) believe that the Book of Mormon is a sacred text with the same divine authority as the Bible.

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Criticism of the Book of Mormon

The Book of Mormon is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which adherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the American continent from approximately 2200 BC to AD 421.

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Criticism of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) has been the subject of criticism since it was founded by American religious leader Joseph Smith in 1830.

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Croaker, Virginia

Croaker is an unincorporated community in James City County, Virginia, United States on the south bank of the York River 10 miles downstream from West Point.

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Crocker Land Expedition

The Crocker Land Expedition took place in 1913.

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Crocodile on the Sandbank

Crocodile on the Sandbank is a historical mystery novel by Elizabeth Peters, first published in 1975.

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Cronenberg, Rhineland-Palatinate

Cronenberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Cropmark

Cropmarks or Crop marks are a means through which sub-surface archaeological, natural and recent features may be visible from the air or a vantage point on higher ground or a temporary platform.

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Cross Bones (novel)

Cross Bones is the eighth novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist, Temperance Brennan.

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Cross Mound

Cross Mound (also called the Tarlton Cross Mound) is an earthwork located near Tarlton, Ohio in the United States.

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Crossroads to Islam

Crossroads to Islam: The Origins of the Arab Religion and the Arab State is a book by archaeologist Yehuda D. Nevo and researcher Judith Koren.

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Crow Village Sam

Crow Village Sam (Phillips; 1893 – 1974) was a Yup'ik Alaskan Native who lived in the mid Kuskokwim River valley in Alaska.

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Croydon, Cambridgeshire

Croydon is a village and civil parish in South Cambridgeshire, England.

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Crucifixion (Mantegna)

The Crucifixion is a panel in the central part of the predella (see image below) of a large altarpiece painted by Andrea Mantegna between 1457 and 1459 for the high altar of San Zeno, Verona (Italy).

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Cruthin

The Cruthin (Old Irish,; Middle Irish: Cruithnig or Cruithni; Modern Irish: Cruithne) were a people of early medieval Ireland.

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Crysis (video game)

Crysis is a first-person shooter video game developed by Crytek and published by Electronic Arts for Microsoft Windows and released in November 2007.

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Crystal Bennett

Crystal-Margaret Bennett, (20 August 1918 – 12 August 1987) was a British archaeologist.

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Crystallographic database

A crystallographic database is a database specifically designed to store information about the structure of molecules and crystals.

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Cuarto milenio

Cuarto milenio is a Spanish television program directed and presented by journalist Iker Jiménez and Carmen Porter.

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Cuban amazon

The Cuban amazon (Amazona leucocephala) also known as Cuban parrot or the rose-throated parrot, is a medium-sized mainly green parrot found in woodlands and dry forests of Cuba, the Bahamas and Cayman Islands in the Caribbean.

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Cuciulat Cave

Cuciulat Cave (Peștera Cuciulat) is located on the Podișul Someșan plateau, near the village Cuciulat in the commune Letca, Sălaj County, Romania.

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Cucuron

Cucuron is a village (commune) in the Vaucluse department, of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, in southeastern France.

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Cucuruzzu

Cuccuruzzu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Cuddie Springs

Cuddie Springs is a notable archaeological and paleontological site in the semi-arid zone of central northern New South Wales, Australia (near Brewarrina).

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Cuenca, Ecuador

The city of Cuenca — in full, Santa Ana de los Cuatro Ríos de Cuenca — is the capital of the Azuay Province.

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Cuento

Cuento is a Spanish word meaning literally "story" or "tale".

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Cuernavaca Center for Intercultural Dialogue on Development

The Cuernavaca Center for Intercultural Dialogue on Development (CCIDD) (now closed permanently) was a Christian retreat center located in Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.

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Cueva Antón

Cueva Antón is a paleoanthropological and archeological site in the Region of Murcia of southeast Spain.

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Cueva de la Pileta

Cueva de la Pileta (Cave of the Pool in English) is a cave in the province of Málaga (Spain) which has cave paintings and was discovered in 1905.

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Cueva Fell

Cueva Fell is a natural cave and archaeological site in southern Patagonia.

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Cuicuilco

Cuicuilco is an important archaeological site located on the southern shore of Lake Texcoco in the southeastern Valley of Mexico, in what is today the borough of Tlalpan in Mexico City.

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Cullman County Museum

The Cullman County Museum is a historical museum located in downtown Cullman, Alabama, on the corner of Arnold St.

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Cultural assimilation of Native Americans

The cultural assimilation of Native Americans was an assimilation effort by the United States to transform Native American culture to European–American culture between the years of 1790 and 1920.

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Cultural depictions of Stonehenge

The Prehistoric landmark of Stonehenge is distinctive and famous enough to have become frequently referenced in popular culture.

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Cultural heritage management

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

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Cultural heritage of Kosovo

Kosovo is a partially recognized state located in the Balkan Peninsula in Southeastern Europe.

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Cultural heritage protection in Switzerland

The Swiss Agency for the Protection of Cultural Property defines measures to protect cultural property against damage, destruction, theft and loss.

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Cultural resources management

In the broadest sense, cultural resources management (CRM) is the vocation and practice of managing cultural resources, such as the arts and heritage.

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Cultural Revolution

The Cultural Revolution, formally the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a sociopolitical movement in China from 1966 until 1976.

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Culture

Culture is the social behavior and norms found in human societies.

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Culture in Pristina

As the capital city of Kosovo, Pristina is the heart of the cultural and artistic development of all Albanians that live in Kosovo.

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Culture of Denmark

The culture of Denmark has a rich intellectual and artistic heritage.

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Culture of Egypt

The culture of Egypt has thousands of years of recorded history.

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Culture of Ireland

The culture of Ireland includes customs and traditions, language, music, art, literature, folklore, cuisine and sports associated with Ireland and the Irish people.

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Culture of Israel

The roots of the culture of Israel developed long before modern Israel's independence in 1948 and traces back to ancient Israel (1000 BCE).

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Culture of Porto Velho

The Culture of Porto Velho is marked by a strong Northeastern influence with Bumba Meu Boi, the Juninas and Pastorinha peoples, and some influences of south central Brazil.

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Culture of Rome, Italy

The Culture of Rome, Italy refers to the arts, high culture, language, religion, politics, libraries, cuisine, architecture and fashion in Rome, Italy.

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Culture of the United Kingdom

The culture of the United Kingdom is influenced by the UK's history as a developed state, a liberal democracy and a great power; its predominantly Christian religious life; and its composition of four countries—England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland—each of which has distinct customs, cultures and symbolism.

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Culture Vannin

Culture Vannin is the trading name for the Manx Heritage Foundation, established in 1982 by the Isle of Man Government to promote Manx culture, heritage and language.

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Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society

The Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, founded in 1866, is a local historical, antiquarian, archaeological and text publication society and registered charity covering the modern county of Cumbria.

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Cuming Museum

The Cuming Museum in Walworth Road, within the London Borough of Southwark, London, England, houses the collection of the Cuming family and is also a museum of Southwark's history.

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Cunobeline

Cunobeline (or Cunobelin, from Latin Cunobelinus, derived from Greek Kynobellinus, Κυνοβελλίνος) was a king in pre-Roman Britain from about AD 10 until about AD 40.

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Cup and ring mark

Cup and ring marks or cup marks are a form of prehistoric art found mainly in Atlantic Europe – Ireland, Wales, Northern England, France (Brittany), Portugal, Finland, Scotland and Spain (Galicia) – and in Mediterranean Europe – Italy (North-West, Sardinia), Greece (Thessalia) as well as in Scandinavia (Denmark and Sweden) and Switzerland (Caschenna site - Graubunden).

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Cupellation

Cupellation is a refining process in metallurgy, where ores or alloyed metals are treated under very high temperatures and have controlled operations to separate noble metals, like gold and silver, from base metals like lead, copper, zinc, arsenic, antimony or bismuth, present in the ore.

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Cupule

A cupule is a small structure shaped like a cup, including.

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Curator

A curator (from cura, meaning "to take care") is a manager or overseer.

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Currachjaghju

Currachjaghju is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Current Anthropology

Current Anthropology is a peer-reviewed anthropology academic journal published by the University of Chicago Press and sponsored by the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research.

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Current Archaeology

Current Archaeology is a British monthly archaeology magazine.

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Current World Archaeology

Current World Archaeology is a magazine devoted to archaeology spanning the globe.

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Curse

A curse (also called an imprecation, malediction, execration, malison, anathema, or commination) is any expressed wish that some form of adversity or misfortune will befall or attach to some other entity: one or more persons, a place, or an object.

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Curse of the Pharaoh: The Quest for Nefertiti

Curse of the Pharaoh: The Quest for Nefertiti is an ancient Egypt-themed casual game in the adventure genre.

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Cursus

Stonehenge Cursus, Wiltshire Dorset Cursus terminal on Thickthorn Down, Dorset Cursus monuments are Neolithic structures which represent some of the oldest prehistoric monumental structures of the Islands of Britain and Ireland.

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Curt Prüfer

Curt Max Prüfer (July 26, 1881 in Berlin-Friedenau - January 30, 1959 in Baden-Baden) was a German diplomat.

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Curtis Marean

Curtis W. Marean is a professor of archaeology at Arizona State University.

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Cusco

Cusco (Cuzco,; Qusqu or Qosqo), often spelled Cuzco, is a city in southeastern Peru, near the Urubamba Valley of the Andes mountain range.

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Cusco Cathedral

The Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption of the Virgin, also known as Cusco Cathedral, is the mother church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cusco.

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Cut (archaeology)

In archaeology and archaeological stratification a cut or truncation is a context that represents a moment in time when other archaeological deposits were removed for the creation of some feature such as a ditch or pit.

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Cuvierian Society of Cork

The Cuvierian Society of Cork was founded as a committee of the Royal Cork Institution in October 1835.

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Cuyamaca College

Cuyamaca College is a community college in the San Diego County community of Rancho San Diego, near El Cajon, California.

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Cyclododecane

Cyclododecane is an organic compound with the chemical formula (CH2)12.

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Cyclopean masonry

Cyclopean masonry is a type of stonework found in Mycenaean architecture, built with massive limestone boulders, roughly fitted together with minimal clearance between adjacent stones and no use of mortar.

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Cynthia Irwin-Williams

Cynthia Irwin-Williams (April 14, 1936 – June 15, 1990) was an archaeologist of the prehistoric American Southwest.

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Cynthia W. Shelmerdine

Cynthia Wright Shelmerdine is an American classicist and archaeologist, known for her researches into Mycenaean culture and history.

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Cyprian Broodbank

Cyprian Broodbank, (born 26 December 1964) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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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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Cyril Fox

Sir Cyril Fred Fox (16 December 1882 – 15 January 1967) was an English archaeologist.

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Cyril Stanley Smith

Cyril Stanley Smith (4 October 1903 – 25 August 1992) was a British metallurgist and historian of science.

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Cyrus H. Gordon

Cyrus Herzl Gordon (June 29, 1908 – March 30, 2001) was an American scholar of Near Eastern cultures and ancient languages.

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D. P. Agrawal

D.

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D. R. Bhandarkar

Devadatta Ramakrishna Bhandarkar (1875–1950) (देवदत्त रामकृष्ण भांडारकर) was an Indian archaeologist and epigraphist who worked with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).

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Da'at Miqra

The Da’at Miqra (Hebrew דעת מקרא) is a series of volumes of Hebrew-language biblical commentary published by the Jerusalem-based Mossad Harav Kook and constitutes a cornerstone of contemporary Israeli Orthodox bible scholarship.

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Dacia (journal)

Dacia: Revistă arheologică și de istorie veche is a Romanian academic journal of archeology published by the Vasile Pârvan Institute of Archaeology, Bucharest.

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Dacia (Pârvan)

Dacia: An Outline of the Early Civilization of the Carpatho-Danubian Countries is a history book by the Romanian historian and archaeologist Vasile Pârvan (1882 – 1927).

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Dacology

Dacology is a branch of Thracology which focuses on the scientific study of Dacia and Dacian antiquities and is a regional and thematic branch of the larger disciplines of ancient history and archaeology.

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Dacre, Cumbria

Dacre is a small village, civil parish and electoral ward in the Lake District National Park in the Eden District of Cumbria, England.

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Dagon (short story)

"Dagon" is a short story by American author H. P. Lovecraft, written in July 1917, one of the first stories he wrote as an adult.

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Dalgety bone bead

The Dalgety bone bead is a square sectioned, burnt bone fragment with a perforated hollow through the middle.

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Dam

A dam is a barrier that stops or restricts the flow of water or underground streams.

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Damals

Damals is a German monthly popular scientific history magazine.

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Dambach, Germany

Dambach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Damerham

Damerham is a village and civil parish in Hampshire, England, located near to Fordingbridge.

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Damien: Omen II

Damien: Omen II is a 1978 American supernatural horror film directed by Don Taylor, starring William Holden, Lee Grant, and Jonathan Scott-Taylor.

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Dan David Prize

The Dan David Prize grants annually three prizes of US$1 million each for outstanding achievement.

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Dan Garret

Dan Garret is a fictional superhero from DC Comics first appearing in Mystery Men Comics by Fox Comics created by Charles Nicholas.

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Dan Gibson (author)

Daniel "Dan" Gibson (born 1956) is a self-published Canadian author studying the early history of Arabia and Islam.

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Dan H. Yaalon

Dan Hardy Yaalon (Hebrew: דן הארדי יעלון; May 11, 1924, Uherské Hradiště, Czechoslovakia – January 29, 2014, Mevasseret Zion, Israel) was an Israeli pedologist and soil scientist, who contributed to the fields of arid and Mediterranean pedology and paleopedology, as well as the history, sociology, and philosophy of soil science.

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Dan Hicks (archaeologist)

Dan Hicks FSA, MCIfA (born 1972 in Durham, England) is a British archaeologist and anthropologist, and is Associate Professor and Curator at the University of Oxford.

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Dana Cameron

Dana Cameron (born 1965) is an American archaeologist, and author of award-winning crime fiction and urban fantasy.

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Danake

The danake or danace (Greek: δανάκη) was a small silver coin of the Persian Empire (Old Persian dânake), equivalent to the Greek obol and circulated among the eastern Greeks.

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Dance

Dance is a performing art form consisting of purposefully selected sequences of human movement.

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Dance in mythology and religion

Dance is present in mythology and religion globally.

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Dane-zaa

The Dane-zaa (ᑕᓀᖚ, also spelled Dunne-za, or Tsattine), historically referred to as the Beaver tribe by Europeans, are an Athabaskan-speaking group of First Nations people.

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Danel

Danel, father of Aqhat, was a culture hero who appears in an incomplete Ugaritic text of the fourteenth century BCE at Ugarit (modern Ras Shamra), Syria, where the name is rendered DN'IL, "El is judge".

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Dang Deukhuri District

Dang Deukhuri is located in Inner Terai, some 410 km west of the capital city, Kathmandu in Province No. 5 in midwestern Nepal.

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Danger Cave

Danger Cave is a North American archaeological site located in the Bonneville Basin of western Utah around the Great Salt Lakes region, that features artifacts of the Desert Culture from c. 9000 BC until c. 500 AD.

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Danger Island (TV series)

Danger Island is a live-action adventure serial produced by Hanna-Barbera and originally broadcast in 1968–69 as a segment of The Banana Splits Adventure Hour.

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Daniel E. Fleming

Daniel Edward Fleming is an American biblical scholar and Assyriologist whose work centers on Hebrew Bible interpretation and cultural history, ancient Syria, Emar, ancient religion, and the interplay of ancient Near Eastern societies.

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Daniel Garrison Brinton

Daniel Garrison Brinton (May 13, 1837July 31, 1899) was an American archaeologist and ethnologist.

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Daniel Gurney

Daniel Gurney (1791–1880), was an English banker and antiquary from the Gurney family of Norwich.

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Daniel Jackson (Stargate)

Daniel Jackson, Ph.D., is a fictional character in the military science fiction franchise Stargate, and one of the main characters of the series Stargate SG-1. He is portrayed by James Spader in the 1994 film ''Stargate'', and by Michael Shanks in Stargate SG-1 and other SG-1 derived media.

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Daniel Martin (novel)

Daniel Martin is a novel by John Fowles.

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Daniel Wilson (academic)

Sir Daniel Wilson (January 5, 1816 – August 6, 1892) was a Scottish-born Canadian archaeologist, ethnologist and author.

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Danielle Stordeur

Danielle Stordeur is a French Archaeologist and Directeur de Recherche at the CNRS.

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Danubian corridor

In paleontology and archaeology, the Danubian corridor or Rhine-Danube corridor refers to a route along the valleys of the Danube River and Rhine River of various migrations of Eastern cultures from Asia Minor, the Aegean region, the Pontic-Caspian steppe, etc., into the north and northwest of Europe.

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Daphne Caruana Galizia

Daphne Anne Caruana Galizia (26 August 1964 – 16 October 2017) was a Maltese journalist, writer, and anti-corruption activist, who reported on political events in Malta.

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Darby Store

The Darby Store is a historic site located in Beallsville, Maryland.

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Dark Ages (historiography)

The "Dark Ages" is a historical periodization traditionally referring to the Middle Ages, that asserts that a demographic, cultural, and economic deterioration occurred in Western Europe following the decline of the Roman Empire.

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Dark ages of Cambodia

The Dark ages of Cambodia, also called the Middle Period, refers to the historical era from the early 15th century to 1863, the beginning of the French Protectorate of Cambodia.

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Dark earth

Dark earth in archaeology is an archaeological horizon, as much as thick, indicating settlement over long periods of time.

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Dark Fall II: Lights Out

Dark Fall II: Lights Out is a 2004 first-person psychological horror/adventure game developed by XXv Productions and published by The Adventure Company for Microsoft Windows.

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Darko Macan

Darko Macan (born 1966) is a Croatian author and illustrator who has created and collaborated on comics, essays and science fiction and fantasy.

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Darra-e Kur

Darra-e Kūr or Bābā Darwīsh, is an archaeological site in Badakhshan province in Afghanistan.

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Dartmoor

Dartmoor is a moor in southern Devon, England.

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Daruvar

Daruvar (Daruvar, Daruwar, Daruvár, Aqua Balissae) is a spa town and municipality in Slavonia, northeastern Croatia, with a population of 8,567, as of 2011.

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Darwin Shopping Centre

The Darwin Shopping Centre is the largest of the three main shopping centres in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, comprising approximately 17 per cent of the town centre's retail offer by leasable area.

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Daryll Forde

Cyril Daryll Forde (16 March 1902 – 3 May 1973) was a British anthropologist and Africanist.

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Dasht-e Nawar

Dasht-e Nāwar is an archaeological sites in Ghazni province in Afghanistan.

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DAT/EM Systems International

DAT/EM Systems International is an Alaska-based company that develops digital photogrammetric mapping applications to extract and edit 3D vector terrain and object features from stereo imagery and point clouds.

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Daughters of Jacob Bridge

The Daughters of Jacob Bridge (גשר בנות יעקב, Gesher Bnot Ya'akov, or Arabic: Jisr Benat Ya'kub) is a site on the upper Jordan River.

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Dave Fredrickson

David Allen "Dave" Fredrickson (August 11, 1927 – August 28, 2012) was an American archaeologist, anthropologist, and folk singer.

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David

David is described in the Hebrew Bible as the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah.

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David Baazov Museum of History of Jews of Georgia

The David Baazov Museum of History of Jews of Georgia is a principal museum of the Jewish history and culture in Tbilisi, Georgia.

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David Boyle (archaeologist)

David Boyle (1 May 1842 – 14 February 1911) was a Canadian blacksmith, teacher, archaeologist, musicologist, and historian.

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David Breeze

David John Breeze, OBE, FSA, FRSE, Hon FSA Scot, Hon MIFA (born 25 July 1944) is a British archaeologist, teacher and scholar of Hadrian's Wall, the Antonine Wall and the Roman army.

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David Crockett Graham

David Crockett Graham (葛維漢, Ge Weihan), D.Sc., Ph.D., B.D., F.R.G.S. (21 March 1884 – 15 September 1961) was a polymath American Baptist minister and missionary, educator, author, archeologist, anthropologist, naturalist and field collector in Szechuan Province, West China from 1911 to 1948.

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David Douglas Duncan

David Douglas Duncan (January 23, 1916 – June 7, 2018) was an American photojournalist who is best known for his dramatic combat photographs.

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David E. Johnston

David E Johnston is a classical archaeologist and former lecturer at the University of Southampton.

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David Ernst Oppenheim

David Ernst Oppenheim (20 April 1881 — 18 February 1943) was an Austrian educator and psychologist who collaborated with Sigmund Freud and Alfred Adler.

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David Favis-Mortlock

Dr David T. Favis-Mortlock is an English geomorphologist and musician.

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David Gardner (fiddler)

David M. Gardner is a Scottish fiddle performer, teacher, and judge.

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David George Hogarth

David George Hogarth, (23 May 1862 – 6 November 1927), also known as D. G. Hogarth, was a British archaeologist and scholar associated with T. E. Lawrence and Arthur Evans.

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David Gibbins

David Gibbins, FRSA, FRGS (born 1962) is an underwater archaeologist and a bestselling novelist.

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David Grose

David F. Grose (November 21, 1944 – October 13, 2004) was an American archaeologist and Professor of Classics and Archaeology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

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David Grove

David C. Grove (born 1935) is an American anthropologist, archaeologist and academic, known for his contributions and research into the Preclassic (or Formative) period cultures of Mesoamerica, in particular those of the Mexican ''altiplano'' and Gulf Coast regions.

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David H. Kelley

David Humiston Kelley (April 1, 1924 in Albany, New York – May 19, 2011) was a Canadian American archaeologist and epigrapher, most noted for his work on the phonetic analysis and major contributions toward the decipherment of the writing system used by the Maya civilization of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, the Maya script.

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David H. Trump

David Hilary Trump (1931 – August 31, 2016) was a British archaeologist known for his work in the area of Maltese prehistory.

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David L. Clarke

David Leonard Clarke (3 November 1937 – 27 June 1976) was an English archaeologist and academic.

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David L. DeJarnette

David Lloyd DeJarnette (1907-1991) was an archaeologist and professor with the University of Alabama, generally considered the "Father of Alabama Archaeology".

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David L. Kennedy

David Leslie Kennedy is an archaeologist and historian of the Roman Near East, with a focus on Aerial Archaeology, Roman landscape studies and the Roman military.

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David Lewis-Williams

James David Lewis-Williams (born 1934 in Cape Town) is a South African archaeologist.

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David M. Brugge

David Martin Brugge (1927 – 2013) was a cultural anthropologist, ethnohistorian, linguist, archaeologist and noted for his knowledge about the Navajo.

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David M. Pendergast

David Michael Pendergast, (born 1934) is an American Archaeologist, and is most famous for his work at Altun Ha and Lamanai, Belize.

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David M. Wilson

Sir David Mackenzie Wilson (born 30 October 1931) is a British archaeologist, art historian, and museum curator, specialising in Anglo-Saxon art and the Viking Age.

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David MacRitchie

David MacRitchie (16 April 1851 – 14 January 1925) was a Scottish folklorist and antiquarian.

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David Mattingly (author)

David John Mattingly, FBA (born 18 May 1958) is an archaeologist and historian of the Roman world, who is currently a professor at the University of Leicester.

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David Moore (archaeologist)

David Moore is an American archaeologist and historian.

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David Moore Robinson

David Moore Robinson (September 21, 1880, in Auburn, New York – January 2, 1958, in Oxford, Mississippi) was an American Classical archaeologist credited with the discovery of the ancient city of Olynthus.

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David Neiman

David Neiman (1921–2004) was a renowned scholar in the fields of Biblical Studies, Jewish history, and the long and often complicated relationship between the Catholic Church and the Jews.

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David Oates (archaeologist)

Edward Ernest David Michael Oates, (25 February 1927 – 22 March 2004), known as David Oates, was a British archaeologist and academic specialising in the Ancient Near East.

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David P. Silverman

David P. Silverman is an American archaeologist and Egyptologist.

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David R. Harris

David Russell Harris, FSA, FBA (14 December 1930 – 25 December 2013) was a British geographer, anthropologist, archaeologist and academic, well known for his detailed work on the origins of agriculture and the domestication of plants and animals.

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David Randall-MacIver

David Randall-MacIver FBA (31 October 1873 – 30 April 1945) was a British-born archaeologist, who later became an American citizen.

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David Rindos

David Rindos (1947 – 9 December 1996), was an archaeologist.

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David Soren (archaeologist)

David Soren (born Howard David Soren on October 7, 1946) is an American archaeologist and former vaudeville performer.

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David Stronach

David Stronach (born 1931) is a Scottish archeologist of ancient Iran and Iraq.

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David Ussishkin

David Ussishkin (born 1935) is an Israeli archaeologist and professor emeritus of archaeology.

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David Van Reybrouck

David Grégoire Van Reybrouck (born 11 September 1971 in Bruges) is a Belgian cultural historian, archaeologist and author.

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David Whitehouse

David Bryn Whitehouse, FSA, FRGS (15 October 194117 February 2013) was a British archaeologist and senior scholar of the Corning Museum of Glass.

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Davide Calandra

Davide Calandra (21 October 1856 – 8 September 1915) was an Italian sculptor and cabinet maker.

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Davidsonville Historic State Park

Davidsonville Historic State Park (formerly Old Davidsonville State Park) is a Arkansas state park in Randolph County, Arkansas in the United States.

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Dawenkou culture

The Dawenkou culture is a name given by archaeologists to a group of Neolithic communities who lived primarily in Shandong, but also appeared in Anhui, Henan and Jiangsu, China.

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Daya Ram Sahni

Rai Bahadur Daya Ram Sahni CIE (16 December 1879 – 7 March 1939) was an Indian archaeologist who supervised the excavation of the Indus valley site at Harappa in 1921-22.

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Découvertes Gallimard

Découvertes Gallimard (literally in English “Discoveries Gallimard”; in United Kingdom: New Horizons, in United States: Abrams Discoveries) is an encyclopaedic of illustrated, pocket-sized books on a variety of subjects, aimed at adults and teenagers.

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Désiré Charnay

Claude-Joseph Désiré Charnay (2 May 182824 October 1915) was a French traveller and archaeologist notable both for his explorations of Mexico and Central America, and for the pioneering use of photography to document his discoveries.

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Dölf Wild

Dölf Wild (born 1954) is a Swiss historian, archaeologist, science writer and works as the chief archaeologist of the city of Zürich.

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Dörrebach

Dörrebach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dùn Dubh

Dùn Dubh is a hillfort, located on the Inner Hebridean island of Coll.

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Dünfus

Dünfus is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dead Sea

The Dead Sea (יָם הַמֶּלַח lit. Sea of Salt; البحر الميت The first article al- is unnecessary and usually not used.) is a salt lake bordered by Jordan to the east and Israel and Palestine to the west.

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Dead Sea Scrolls

Dead Sea Scrolls (also Qumran Caves Scrolls) are ancient Jewish religious, mostly Hebrew, manuscripts found in the Qumran Caves near the Dead Sea.

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Dead Wrong (TV series)

Dead Wrong (literally "Fatal Resurrection") is a 2016 Hong Kong television drama produced by Lam Chi-wah and TVB.

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Death and culture

This article is about death in the different cultures around the world as well as ethical issues relating to death, such as martyrdom, suicide and euthanasia.

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Death and Memory in Early Medieval Britain

Death and Memory in Early Medieval Britain is an archaeological study of mnemonic elements in the funerary practices of Early Medieval Britain, written by the British archaeologist Howard Williams.

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Death Comes as the End

Death Comes as the End is a historical mystery novel by Agatha Christie, first published in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company in October 1944 and in the UK by the Collins Crime Club in March of the following year.Chris Peers, Ralph Spurrier and Jamie Sturgeon. Collins Crime Club - A checklist of First Editions. Dragonby Press (Second Edition) March 1999 (Page 15) The US Edition retailed at $2.00 and the UK edition at seven shillings and sixpence (7/6). It is the only one of Christie's novels not to be set in the 20th century, and - unusually for her - also features no European characters. Instead, the novel is set in Thebes in 2000 BC, a setting for which Christie gained an appreciation whilst working with her archaeologist husband, Sir Max Mallowan, in the Middle East. The novel is notable for its very high number of deaths and is comparable to And Then There Were None from this standpoint. It is also the first full-length novel combining historical fiction and the whodunit/detective story, a genre which would later come to be called the historical whodunit. The suggestion to base the story in ancient Egypt came from noted Egyptologist and family friend Stephen Glanville. He also assisted Christie with details of daily household life in Egypt 4000 years ago. In addition he made forceful suggestions to Christie to change the ending of the book. This she did but regretted the fact afterwards, feeling that her (unpublished) ending was better. The novel is based on real letters translated by egyptologist Battiscombe Gunn, from the Egyptian Middle Kingdom period, written by a man called Heqanakhte to his family, complaining about their behaviour and treatment of his concubine. It is one of only four Christie novels to have not received an adaptation of any kind, the others being Destination Unknown, Passenger to Frankfurt and Postern of Fate. A BBC television adaptation for broadcast before 2020 has been announced. Christie uses a theme for her chapter titles, as she did for many of her novels, in this case the Egyptian agricultural calendar.

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Death Hawk

Death Hawk is a fictional American comic book character, a self-styled salvage expert in the 25th century.

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Debala Mitra

Debala Mitra (14 December 1925 – 2 December 2003) was an Indian archaeologist who served as Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) from 1981 to 1983.

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Deborah M. Pearsall

Deborah M. Pearsall (born 1950) is an American archaeologist who specializes in paleoethnobotany.

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Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute

Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute also referred to as Deccan College is a post-graduate institute of Archeology, Linguistics and Sanskrit & Lexicography Pune, India.

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Decline and end of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture

Due partly to the fact that this took place before the written record of this region began, there have been a number of theories presented over the years to fill the gap of knowledge about how and why the end of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture happened.

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Deddington

Deddington is a civil parish and small town in Oxfordshire about south of Banbury.

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Deddington Castle

Deddington Castle was a medieval fortification in the village of Deddington, Oxfordshire.

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Dedi

Dedi (also Djedi or Djedi of Djed-Sneferu) is the name of a fictional ancient Egyptian magician appearing in the fourth chapter of a story told in the legendary Westcar Papyrus. He is said to have worked wonders during the reign of king (pharaoh) Khufu (4th Dynasty).

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Dee Ann Story

Dee Ann Story (neé Suhm; December 12, 1931 – December 26, 2010) was an American archaeologist.

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Deep history

Deep history is a term for the distant past of the human species.

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Deep map

A deep map refers to a map with greater information than a two-dimensional image of places, names, and topography.

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DeepCon

DeepCon (also Deepcon) is an Italian science fiction, fantasy and horror fan convention, covering multiple (ideally all) entertainment forms and media (e.g.: film, television, literature, comics, music, computer), mixed with a dose of actual, real-world science.

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Defence Infrastructure Organisation

Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) is an operating arm of the Ministry of Defence (MoD), in the United Kingdom, which is responsible for the built and rural estate.

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Deforestation

Deforestation, clearance, or clearing is the removal of a forest or stand of trees where the land is thereafter converted to a non-forest use.

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Degenerate art

Degenerate art (Entartete Kunst) was a term adopted in the 1920s by the Nazi Party in Germany to describe modern art.

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Degradation of Mayan archeological sites

Sites of the ancient Maya civilization deteriorate as a result of both environmental and human factors.

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Deimberg

Deimberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Deioces

Deioces or Dia—oku was the founder and the first shah as well as priest of the Median government.

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Deir ez-Zor

Deir ez-Zor (دير الزور Dayr az-Zūr; Syriac: ܕܝܪܐ ܙܥܘܪܬܐ Dayrāʾ Zəʿōrtāʾ) is the largest city in eastern Syria and the seventh largest in the country.

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Deir ez-Zor Museum

The Deir ez-Zor Museum (متحف دير الزور) is a museum devoted to the archaeology and history of northeastern Syria, an area more commonly known as the Jezirah, or Upper Mesopotamia.

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Delaware Canal State Park

Delaware Canal State Park is a Pennsylvania state park in Bucks and Northampton Counties in Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Delia Steinberg Guzmán

Delia Steinberg Guzmán, (Buenos Aires, 1943), is a philosopher, musician and writer and, since 1991, International President of the International Organization New Acropolis, a non profit association dedicated to the promotion of philosophy, culture and volunteering.

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Demere Key

Demere Key is an archaeological site west of Pine Island, Florida.

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Demic diffusion

Demic diffusion, as opposed to trans-cultural diffusion, is a demographic term referring to a migratory model, developed by Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza, of population diffusion into and across an area that had been previously uninhabited by that group, possibly, but not necessarily, displacing, replacing, or intermixing with a pre-existing population (such as has been suggested for the spread of agriculture across Neolithic Europe and several other ''Landnahme'' events).

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Demidov Prize

The Demidov Prize (Демидовская премия) is a national scientific prize in Russia awarded annually to the members of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

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Demirköy Foundry

The Demirköy Foundry (Demirköy Dökümhanesi) is a historic foundry ruin of archaeological importance located at Demirköy in Kırklareli Province, northwestern Turkey.

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Demographic history of Karachi

The Demographic history of Karachi of Sindh, Pakistan.

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Demographics of Vancouver

The Demographics of Metropolitan Vancouver (Greater Vancouver Regional District) concern population growth and structure for Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

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Demonbane

is a visual novel series by Nitroplus with mecha and Cthulhu Mythos elements.

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Demosthenes

Demosthenes (Δημοσθένης Dēmosthénēs;; 384 – 12 October 322 BC) was a Greek statesman and orator of ancient Athens.

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Den (pharaoh)

Den, also known as Hor-Den, Dewen and Udimu, is the Horus name of a pharaoh of the Early Dynastic Period who ruled during the First Dynasty of Egypt.

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Dené–Yeniseian languages

Dené–Yeniseian is a proposed language family consisting of the Yeniseian languages of central Siberia and the Na-Dené languages of northwestern North America.

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Dendra

Dendra (Δενδρά) is a prehistoric archaeological site situated outside the village with the same name belonging to the municipality of Midea in the Argolid, Greece.

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Dendroarchaeology

Dendroarchaeology is a term used for the study of vegetation remains, old buildings, artifacts, furniture, art and musical instruments using the techniques of dendrochronology (tree-ring dating).

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Denis Buzy

Denis Buzy (born at Bénéjacq 22 March 1883; died at Bethlehem 21 May 1965) was a French archaeologist who excavated the Tahunian culture at Wadi Tahuna near Bethlehem in 1928.

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Denis Delestrac

Denis Delestrac (born in France, 1968) is an award-winning film director.

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Denis O'Conor Don

Denis Armar O'Conor, O'Conor Don (Donnchadh Ó Conchubhair Donn; 1912–10 July 2000) was hereditary Chief of the Name O'Conor and principal claiment to the High Kingship of Ireland.

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Denis Williams

Denis Williams (1 February 1923 – 28 June 1998)Petamber Persaud,, Guyana Times International, 23 November 2012.

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Denise Schmandt-Besserat

Denise Schmandt-Besserat (born August 10, 1933 in Ay, Marne, France) is a French-American archaeologist and retired professor of art and archaeology of the ancient Near East.

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Denisova Cave

Denisova Cave (Дени́сова Пеще́ра, Аю-Таш.

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Denisovan

The Denisovans or Denisova hominins) are an extinct species or subspecies of archaic humans in the genus Homo.

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Dennis E. Puleston

Dennis E. Puleston Ph.D (19 June 1940 – 29 June 1978Harrison, P.D.; Messenger, P.E. (1980). "Obituary: Dennis E. Puleston". American Antiquity 45 (2): 272-276.) was an American archaeologist and ecologist.

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Dennis Jenkins

Dennis L. Jenkins is a research archaeologist, field school supervisor for the Oregon State Museum of Anthropology/Museum of Natural and Cultural History at the University of Oregon, and director of the university's Northern Great Basin Field School.

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Dennis Stanford

Dennis J. Stanford (born 13 May 1943 in Cherokee, Iowa) is an archaeologist and Director of the Paleoindian/Paleoecology Program at the National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonian Institution.

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Dennweiler-Frohnbach

Dennweiler-Frohnbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dense-rock equivalent

Dense-rock equivalent is a volcanologic calculation used to estimate volcanic eruption volume.

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Denticulate tool

In archeology, a denticulate tool is a stone tool containing one or more edges that are worked into multiple notched shapes (or teeth), much like the toothed edge of a saw.

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Deogarh, Uttar Pradesh

Deogarh is a village in Lalitpur district of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.

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Department of Antiquities

A Department of Antiquities is a government department with responsibility for cultural heritage management, archaeological research and regulating antiquities trading in a country.

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Department of Antiquities (Cyprus)

The Department of Antiquities is a government department of the Republic of Cyprus with responsibility for archaeological research and cultural heritage management.

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Department of Antiquities (Jordan)

The Department of Antiquities is a government department in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan with responsibility for archaeological research and cultural heritage management.

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Department of Archaeology at the University of York

The Department of Archaeology at the University of York, England, is a department of archaeology which provides undergraduate and postgraduate courses in archaeology and its sub-disciplines and conducts associated research.

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Departmental Museum of archaeology Gilort (Jérôme) Carcopino

The Departmental Museum of archaeology Gilort (Jérôme) Carcopino is situated in the commune of Aleria in Corsica (France) at around 70 kilometers from Bastia and at 120 kilometers from Ajaccio.

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Deposit model

In the field of archaeology a deposit model is a method of identifying the character and degree of survival of buried archaeological remains over a specified area without necessarily excavating the whole area.

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Derby

Derby is a city and unitary authority area in Derbyshire, England.

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Derek Roe

Derek Arthur Roe was a British archaeologist most famous for his work on the Palaeolithic period.

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Desheret

Desheret is a project dedicated to ancient Egypt's treasures.

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Desilo

Desilo is a small valley in southern Bosnia and Herzegovina, located near the Neretva river and the Croatian border.

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Desiré-Raoul Rochette

Desiré-Raoul Rochette (March 6, 1790 – July 3, 1854), was a French archaeologist.

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Deur Kothar

Deorkothar (Devanāgarī: देउर कोठार, also Deur Kothar) is a location of archaeological importance in Madhya Pradesh, Central India.

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Deutsche Gesellschaft für Ur- und Frühgeschichte

The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Ur- und Frühgeschichte e.V. (DGUF) – the German Society for Pre- and Protohistory – has more than 700 members and is thus the largest German association active in the field of prehistory and the early historical period.

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Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft

The Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft (German Oriental Society), abbreviated DOG, is a German voluntary association based in Berlin dedicated to the study of the Near East.

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Devarim (parsha)

Devarim, D'varim, or Debarim (— Hebrew for "things" or "words," the second word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 44th weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the first in the Book of Deuteronomy.

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Deverel–Rimbury culture

The Deverel–Rimbury culture was a name given to an archaeological culture of the British Middle Bronze Age.

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Devil's Lair

Devil's Lair is a single-chamber cave with a floor area of around that formed in a Quaternary dune limestone of the Leeuwin–Naturaliste Ridge, from the modern coastline of Western Australia.

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Devils and Realist

is a Japanese manga series written by Madoka Takadono and illustrated by Utako Yukihiro.

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Devtamura

Devtamura (or Debtamura) is a hill range in South Tripura district of Tripura, India.

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Dhamar, Yemen

Dhamar (ذمار Ḏamār) is a city in south-western Yemen.

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Dhegihan History and Separation

The Dhegihan (Degihan) migration history and separation is the narrative of the long journey on foot by the North American Indians in the ancient Hoga tribe.

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Dhunge Dhara

A Dhunge Dhara (Nepali:ढुङ्गे धारा) is a traditional stone water tap found extensively in Nepal.

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Diagenesis

Diagenesis is the change of sediments or existing sedimentary rocks into a different sedimentary rock during and after rock formation (lithification), at temperatures and pressures less than that required for the formation of metamorphic rocks.

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Diamond Sutra

The Diamond Sūtra (Sanskrit:Vajracchedikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra) is a Mahāyāna (Buddhist) sūtra from the Prajñāpāramitā sutras or 'Perfection of Wisdom' genre.

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Diana Haddad

Diana Haddad (ديانا حداد) (born 1 October 1976) is a Lebanese singer and television personality who also holds an Emirati citizenship and is based in the United Arab Emirates.

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Diana Kirkbride

Diana Victoria Warcup Kirkbride-Helbæk, (22 October 1915 – 13 August 1997) was a British archaeologist who specialised in the prehistory of the Near East.

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Diane Gifford-Gonzalez

Diane Gifford-Gonzalez is an American archaeologist who specializes in the field of zooarchaeology.

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Diane Zaino Chase

Diane Zaino Chase (born 1953) is an American anthropologist and archaeologist who specializes in the study of the Ancient Maya.

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Diósgyőr

Diósgyőr is a historical town in Hungary, today it is a part of Miskolc.

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Dicționar enciclopedic român

The Dicționar enciclopedic român is a Romanian encyclopedia published by Editura Politica between 1962 and 1966.

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Dick Cole (politician)

Richard "Dick" Cole (born 6 April 1968) is a Cornish politician, currently serving as an elected member of Cornwall Council and the leader of the Cornish devolutionist political party, Mebyon Kernow, a role he has held since 1997.

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Dickson Mounds

Dickson Mounds is a Native American settlement site and burial mound complex near Lewistown, Illinois.

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Dictionary of the Khazars

Dictionary of the Khazars: A Lexicon Novel (rtl, rtl) is the first novel by Serbian writer Milorad Pavić, published in 1984.

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Dictionnaire des Antiquités Grecques et Romaines

The Dictionnaire des Antiquités Grecques et Romaines d'après les textes et les monuments, contenant l'explication des termes qui se rapportent aux mœurs, aux institutions, à la religion, aux arts, aux sciences, au costume, au mobilier, à la guerre, à la marine, aux métiers, aux monnaies, poids et mesures, etc.

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Diego Durán

Diego Durán (c. 1537 – 1588) was a Dominican friar best known for his authorship of one of the earliest Western books on the history and culture of the Aztecs, The History of the Indies of New Spain, a book that was much criticised in his lifetime for helping the "heathen" maintain their culture.

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Dienstweiler

Dienstweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dieter Vieweger

Dieter Vieweger, a German Biblical scholar and Prehistorian Archaeologist, was born in Chemnitz, East Germany in 1958.

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Dig (magazine)

Dig was a children's archaeology magazine, published by Cricket Media and associated with the Archaeological Institute of America.

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DIG: an archaeological adventure

DIG is an educational resource owned by the York Archaeological Trust which aims to increase understanding of archaeology and related matters.

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Diggers (TV series)

Diggers was an American reality television series, shown on National Geographic Channel.

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Digging

Digging is the process of using some implement such as claws, hands, or tools, to remove material from a solid surface, usually soil or sand on the surface of the Earth.

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Digging for Britain

Digging For Britain is a television series on archaeology made by 360 Production for the BBC, starting in August 2010.

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Digging stick

In archaeology and anthropology, a digging stick, or sometimes yam stick, is a wooden implement used primarily by subsistence-based cultures to dig out underground food such as roots and tubers or burrowing animals and anthills.

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Digital archaeology

Digital archaeology is the application of information technology and digital media to archaeology.

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Digital Classicist

The Digital Classicist is a community of those interested in the application of Digital Humanities to the field of Classics and to ancient world studies more generally.

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Digital elevation model

A digital elevation model (DEM) is a 3D CG representation of a terrain's surface – commonly of a planet (e.g. Earth), moon, or asteroid – created from a terrain's elevation data.

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Digital humanities

Digital humanities (DH) is an area of scholarly activity at the intersection of computing or digital technologies and the disciplines of the humanities.

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Digital image

A digital image is a numeric representation, normally binary, of a two-dimensional image.

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Digital mapping

Digital mapping (also called digital cartography) is the process by which a collection of data is compiled and formatted into a virtual image.

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Digitizing AAR Archive

The Archives at the American Academy in Rome (AAR) are digitized archaeological and photographic collections assisting in the preservation and conservation of the cultural heritage of Rome.

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Dildo Island

Dildo Island is an island in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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Dillendorf

Dillendorf is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dimitar Sasselov

Dimitar D. Sasselov (Димитър Д. Съселов, born 1961) is a Bulgarian astronomer based in the United States.

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Dimitrios Pandermalis

Dimitrios Pandermalis (Δημήτριος Παντερμαλής, born 1940), is a Professor of Archaeology at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, supervisor of the Archaeological site of Dion, Pieria and curator of the new Acropolis Museum.

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Dinas Powys hillfort

The Dinas Powys hillfort is an Iron Age hillfort near Dinas Powys, Glamorgan, Wales.

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Dinétah

Dinétah is the traditional homeland of the Navajo tribe of Native Americans.

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Dinerth Castle

The Castle of Dinerth (Castell Dineirth, Castell Dinerth, or Castell Allt Craig Arth) is a Welsh castle located near Aberarth, Ceredigion, west Wales that was completed 1110.

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Dingane kaSenzangakhona

Dingane kaSenzangakhona Zulu (ca. 1795–1840)—commonly referred to as Dingane or Dingaan—was a Zulu chief who became king of the Zulu Kingdom in 1828.

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Dinmore Hill

Dinmore Hill rises steeply above the River Lugg in Herefordshire, England and is effectively the prominent eastern ridge of an area of high ground which reaches a height of 236m at Birley Hill some 4 to 5km to the west.

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Dinton, Buckinghamshire

Dinton is a village in Buckinghamshire, England.

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Diocletianopolis (Thrace)

Diocletianopolis (Διοκλητιανούπολις, Диоклецианопол, "Town of Diocletian") was a magnificent ancient Roman town in the region of Thrace, nowadays the town of Hisarya in Bulgaria.

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Diomede, Alaska

Diomede (Диомид, native name Iŋaliq, meaning "the other one" or "the one over there") is a village in the Nome Census Area of the Unorganized Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska, located on the west coast of Little Diomede Island.

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Direct historical approach

The direct historical approach to archaeology was a methodology developed in the United States of America during the 1920s-1930s by William Duncan Strong and others, which argued that knowledge relating to historical periods is extended back into earlier times.

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Dirk Obbink

Dirk D. Obbink (born 1957 in Lincoln, Nebraska) is an American-born papyrologist and Classicist.

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Dirk Schulze-Makuch

Dirk Schulze-Makuch (born 1964) is a professor at the Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics at the Technical University Berlin, Germany.

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Dirmstein

Dirmstein is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Dürkheim district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Discovery of Fiji

Located in the central Pacific Ocean, Fiji's geography has made it both a destination and a crossroads for migrations for many centuries.

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Discworld characters

This article contains brief biographies for characters from Terry Pratchett's Discworld series.

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Disney Professor of Archaeology

The Disney Professorship of Archaeology is an endowed chair in archaeology at the University of Cambridge.

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Disposal of human corpses

Disposal of human corpses is the practice and process of dealing with the remains of a deceased human being.

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Divino afflante Spiritu

Divino afflante Spiritu ("Inspired by the Holy Spirit") is a papal encyclical letter issued by Pope Pius XII on 30 September 1943 calling for new translations of the Bible from the original languages, instead of the Latin Vulgate of Jerome, which was revised multiple times and had formed the textual basis for all Catholic vernacular translations until then.

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Divje Babe Flute

The Divje Babe Flute is a cave bear femur pierced by spaced holes that was found in 1995 at the Divje Babe archeological park located near Cerkno in northwestern Slovenia.

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Djadjaemankh

Djadjaemankh is the name of a fictitious ancient Egyptian magician appearing in the third chapter of a story told in the legendary Westcar Papyrus. He is said to have worked wonders during the reign of king (pharaoh) Sneferu (4th dynasty).

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Dmitry Anuchin

Dmitry Nikolayevich Anuchin (1843–1923) was a Russian anthropologist, ethnographist, archaeologist, and geographer.

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Dmitry Aynalov

Dmitry Vlasyevich Aynalov (p; 20 February (8 February O.S.) 1862—12 December 1939) was a Soviet and Russian art historian, a university professor, a corresponding member of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1914), and a member of the Imperial Orthodox Palestine Society.

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Dmitry Samokvasov

Dmitry Yakovlevich Samokvasov (1843 — 1911) was a Russian archaeologist and legal historian who excavated the Black Grave in Chernigov and several other sites important for the history of Kievan Rus.

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Dmitry Strukov

Dmitry Mikhailovich Strukov (Russian: Дмитрий Михайлович Струков; 1828, Moscow - 1899, Moscow) was a Russian painter, art restorer and archaeologist.

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Dmytro Yavornytsky

Dmytro Ivanovych Yavornytsky or Dmitry Ivanovich Yavornitsky (Дмитро́ Іва́нович Яворни́цький, Дмитрий Иванович Яворницкий) (November 6, 1855, Kharkov Governorate, Russian Empire – August 5, 1940, Dnipropetrovsk, Soviet Union) was a Russian, Ukrainian and Soviet academician, historian, archeologist, ethnographer, folklorist, and lexicographer.

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Doc Savage

Doc Savage is a fictional character originally published in American pulp magazines during the 1930s and 1940s.

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Doctor Lautrec and the Forgotten Knights

is an adventure game for the Nintendo 3DS.

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Documents (magazine)

Documents was a Surrealist art magazine edited by Georges Bataille.

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Doggerland

Doggerland is the name of a land mass now beneath the southern North Sea that connected Great Britain to continental Europe.

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Dogra Art Museum, Jammu

Dogra Art Museum, Jammu previously known as the Dogra Art Gallery is a museum of Dogra cultural heritage housed in the Pink Hall of the Mubarak Mandi complex, Jammu, India.

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Dokos shipwreck

The Dokos shipwreck is the oldest underwater shipwreck discovery known to archeologists.

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Dolaucothi Gold Mines

The Dolaucothi Gold Mines (Mwynfeydd Aur Dolaucothi), also known as the Ogofau Gold Mine, are ancient Roman surface and underground mines located in the valley of the River Cothi, near Pumsaint, Carmarthenshire, Wales.

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Doll

A doll is a model of a human being, often used as a toy for children.

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Dolly Dearest

Dolly Dearest is a 1991 American black comedy horror film starring Denise Crosby and Rip Torn.

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Dolní Věstonice (archaeology)

Dolní Věstonice (often without diacritics as Dolni Vestonice) refers to an Upper Paleolithic archaeological site near the village of Dolní Věstonice, Moravia in the Czech Republic,on the base of Děvín Mountain, dating to approximately 26,000 BP, as supported by radiocarbon dating.

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Dolores Piperno

Dolores Piperno is an American archaeologist specializing in archaeobotany.

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Domburg (civic structure)

A Domburg (German: Cathedral Castle) was the cathedral close or area in many old European diocesan seats around the cathedral surrounded by a large fortified wall and only accessible through gatehouse.

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Domebo Canyon, Oklahoma

Domebo Canyon, Oklahoma is a Paleo-Indian archaeological site: the site of a mammoth kill in the prairie of southwestern Oklahoma.

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Domenico Distilo

Domenico Distilo (born 25 December 1978 in Rome, Lazio, Italy) is a filmmaker living and working between Rome, Italy and Berlin, Germany.

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Domenico Ridola

Domenico Ridola (19 October 1841, in Ferrandina – 11 June 1932, in Matera) was an Italian physician, politician and archaeologist.

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Domestication

Domestication is a sustained multi-generational relationship in which one group of organisms assumes a significant degree of influence over the reproduction and care of another group to secure a more predictable supply of resources from that second group.

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Domestication of the horse

A number of hypotheses exist on many of the key issues regarding the domestication of the horse.

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Domingo Arechiga

Domingo Arechiga, Jr. (December 14, 1926 – February 26, 1987), was an Hispanic educator who from 1974 to 1985 was the president of Laredo Community College, then Laredo Junior College in Laredo, Texas.

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Domingos Soares Ferreira Penna

Domingos Soares Ferreira Penna (June 6, 1818 – January 6, 1888) was a Brazilian naturalist from the state of Minas Gerais, who founded the Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, in Belém, and undertook important research in the archeology and natural resources of the lower Amazon River valley.

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Dominic Tweddle

Dominic Tweddle,, is an English archaeologist specialising in Anglo-Saxon studies and the Director General of the National Museum of the Royal Navy.

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Dominican green-and-yellow macaw

The Dominican green-and-yellow macaw, Atwood's macaw, or Dominican macaw (Ara atwoodi) is an extinct species of macaw that may have lived on the island of Dominica.

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Dominique Baffier

Dominique Baffier is a French archaeologist and prehistorian who specialises in paleolithic cave paintings, or parietal art.

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Dominique Charpin

Dominique Charpin (born 12 June 1954 in Neuilly-sur-Seine) is a French Assyriologist, professor at the Collège de France, corresponding member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, specialized in the "Old-Babylonian" period.

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Dominique-France Loeb-Picard

Dominique-France Loeb Picard (born 23 November 1948), also called Princess Fadila of Egypt, is the ex-wife of Fuad II, former King of Egypt and the Sudan.

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Domitian

Domitian (Titus Flavius Caesar Domitianus Augustus; 24 October 51 – 18 September 96 AD) was Roman emperor from 81 to 96.

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Domkirkepladsen 1

Domkirkepladsen 1 is a listed building and the former Bank of Denmark branch building in Aarhus, Denmark.

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Don Barry Mason

Don 'Barry' Mason (1950–2006) was the founder of the Psychedelic Shamanistic Institute (PSI), a networking organisation that encouraged ethnobotany and scientific research into cannabis and other psychoactive plants while contributing substantially to the public debate about drug policy reform.

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Don Brothwell

Donald Reginald "Don" Brothwell, (1933 – 26 September 2016) was a British archaeologist, anthropologist, and academic, who specialised in human palaeoecology and environmental archaeology.

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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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Don Rittner

Don Rittner is an American historian, archeologist, environmental activist, educator, and author living in the Capital District, Schenectady County, New York.

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Donald B. Redford

Donald Bruce Redford (born September 2, 1934) is a Canadian Egyptologist and archaeologist, currently Professor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies at Pennsylvania State University.

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Donald Brian Doe

Donald Brian Doe (19 June 1920 – 5 May 2005) was a British archaeologist and architect.

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Donald Collier

Donald Collier (May 1, 1911 – January 23, 1995) was an archaeologist, ethnologist, and museologist.

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Donald Ferlys Wilson Baden-Powell

Donald Ferlys Wilson Baden-Powell (5 October 1897 – 11 September 1973), son of Sir George Smyth Baden-Powell, was a geologist who taught geology and palaeolithic archaeology at the University of Oxford.

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Donald P. Ryan

Donald P. Ryan (born 1957) is an American archaeologist, Egyptologist, writer and a member of the Division of Humanities at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington.

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Donald Wiseman

Donald John Wiseman (25 October 1918 – 2 February 2010) was a biblical scholar, archaeologist and Assyriologist.

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Donegal County Museum

Donegal County Museum (Músaem Chontae Dhún na nGall) is a county museum, officially recognised by the Government of Ireland as the best in the country.

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Donegore

Donegore (historically Dunogcurra) is the name of a hill, a townland, a small cluster of residences, and a civil parish in the historic barony of Antrim Upper, County Antrim, Northern Ireland.

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Dong-a University

Dong-A University is a private university in Busan, South Korea.

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Dongjum

Dongjum (Doanjum) is a small village in Waadhoeke in the province Friesland of the Netherlands and has around the 326 citizens January 2014.

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Donington le Heath Manor House Museum

Donington le Heath Manor House Museum is a surviving example of a manor house built around seven hundred years ago in Donington le Heath, near the town of Coalville, Leicestershire.

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Donja Stubica

Donja Stubica is a town in Croatia, about northeast of Zagreb on the northern slope of Medvednica.

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Donny George Youkhanna

Donny George Youkhanna (Arabic: دوني جورج, ܕܘܢܝ ܓܘܪܓ ܝܘܚܢܢ) (October 23, 1950 – March 11, 2011) was an Iraqi-Assyrian archaeologist, anthropologist, author, curator, and scholar, and a visiting professor at Stony Brook University in New York.

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Donovan Courville

Donovan Amos Courville (April 6, 1901 in Michigan – August 1996, in Fresno, California) (Ph.D., Chemistry), was a graduate of Andrews University.

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Donovan Joyce

Donovan Maxwell Joyce (31 October 191016 October 1980) was an Australian radio producer and writer, best known as the author of the international best-seller The Jesus Scroll.

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Dooagh

Dooagh (Dumha Acha) is a village located on Achill Island in County Mayo, Ireland.

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Dora Greenwell

Dora Greenwell, born Dorothy Greenwell (1821–1882) was an English poet.

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Dorath Pinto Uchôa

Dorath Pinto Uchôa (1 November 1947 – 28 March 2014) was a Brazilian archaeologist and one of the founders of Brazilian Society of Archaeology.

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Dorian invasion

The Dorian invasion is a concept devised by historians of Ancient Greece to explain the replacement of pre-classical dialects and traditions in southern Greece by the ones that prevailed in Classical Greece.

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Doris Zemurray Stone

Doris Zemurray Stone (November 19, 1909 – October 21, 1994) was an archaeologist and ethnographer, specializing in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and the so-called "Intermediate Area" of lower Central America.

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Dormanstown

Dormanstown is a place in the borough of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England.

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Doro Levi

Doro Levi (1899–1991) was an archaeologist who practiced in the Mediterranean countries in the 20th century.

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Dorothy Garrod

Dorothy Annie Elizabeth Garrod, CBE, FBA (5 May 1892 – 18 December 1968) was an English archaeologist who specialised in the Palaeolithic period.

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Dorothy J. Thompson

Dorothy Joan Thompson, (born 31 May 1939) is an ancient historian and classicist who specialises in the culture and society of Hellenistic Egypt, the early Hellenistic world, and documentary papyrology.

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Dorothy King

Dorothy Louise Victoria Lobel King (born 1975) is an American author and archeologist who lives and works in England.

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Dorothy Lamb

Lady Dorothy Brooke Nicholson, (1887–1967), better known by her maiden name Dorothy Lamb, was a British archaeologist and writer known for her catalogue of terracotta in the Acropolis Museum, Athens and her work in Mediterranean field archaeology.

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Dorothy Popenoe

Dorothy Popenoe (born Dorothy Kate Hughes in June 1899 in Ashford, Middlesex, England) was an English archaeologist and botanist.

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Dorothy Walker (journalist and writer)

Dorothy Walker is a British journalist and author.

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Dorsheim

Dorsheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dortmund

Dortmund (Düörpm:; Tremonia) is an independent city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

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Double Adobe Site

The Double Adobe Site is an archaeological site in southern Arizona, twelve miles northwest of Douglas in the Whitewater Draw area.

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Double Arches Pit

Double Arches Pit (formerly known as New Trees Pit) was a sand quarry near the village and civil parish of Heath and Reach, Bedfordshire, England.

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Doug Tushingham

Arlotte Douglas Tushingham (1914 - February 27, 2002) was a Canadian archaeologist most noted for his excavations of Jericho with Kathleen Kenyon.

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Dougga

Dougga or Thugga (Berber: Dugga, Tugga, دڨة or دقة) is a Romano-Berber city in northern Tunisia, included in a 65 hectare archaeological site.

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Douglas D. Scott

Douglas D. Scott is an American archaeologist most notable for his work at the Little Bighorn in the mid-1980s.

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Douglas W. Owsley

Douglas W. Owsley, Ph.D. (born July 21, 1951) is an American anthropologist who is the current Head of Physical Anthropology at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History (NMNH).

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Douglas, Isle of Man

Douglas (Doolish) is the capital and largest town of the Isle of Man, with a population of 27,938 (2011).

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Douro

The Douro (Douro; Duero; translation) is one of the major rivers of the Iberian Peninsula, flowing from its source near Duruelo de la Sierra in Soria Province across northern-central Spain and Portugal to its outlet at Porto.

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Dover

Dover is a town and major ferry port in the home county of Kent, in South East England.

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Down (novel)

Down is an original novel by Lawrence Miles featuring the fictional archaeologist Bernice Summerfield.

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Downtown Presbyterian Church (Nashville)

The Downtown Presbyterian Church in Nashville, Tennessee, a part of the Presbyterian Church (USA), was formerly known as First Presbyterian Church.

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Dragon Bones

Dragon Bones by Lisa See (2003) is the third of the Red Princess mysteries, preceded by Flower Net and The Interior.

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Dragoslav Srejović

Dragoslav Srejović (Драгослав Срејовић) (Kragujevac, October 8, 1931 – November 29, 1996) was a Serbian archaeologist and historian.

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Dragutin Gorjanović-Kramberger

Dragutin Gorjanović-Kramberger (born October 25, 1856 in Zagreb, died December 24, 1936, Zagreb) was a Croatian geologist, paleontologist, and archeologist.

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Draper Site, Wendat (Huron) Ancestral Village

The Draper Site is a precontact period (late fifteenth-century) Huron-Wendat ancestral village located on a tributary of West Duffins Creek in present-day Pickering, Ontario, approximately 35 kilometres northeast of Toronto.

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Dravidian University

The Dravidian University, Kuppam, Chittoor district, Andhra Pradesh, India was established by the Government of Andhra Pradesh, through a Legislature Act (No. 17 of 1997) with the initial support extended by the governments of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala for an integrated development of Dravidian languages and culture.

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Dream Pool Essays

The Dream Pool Essays or Dream Torrent Essays (Pinyin: Mèng Xī Bǐ Tán; Wade-Giles: Meng⁴ Hsi¹ Pi³-t'an²; Chinese: 夢溪筆談/梦溪笔谈) was an extensive book written by the Han Chinese polymath, genius, scientist and statesman Shen Kuo (1031-1095) by 1088 AD, during the Song dynasty (960-1279) of China.

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Dresden Heath

The Dresden Heath (Dresdner Heide) is a large forest in the city of Dresden.

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Drsnik, Kosovo

Drsnik (Дрсник) or Dërsnik (Dërsnik or Dërsniku) is a settlement in the Klina municipality of Kosovo.

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Druidry (modern)

Druidry, sometimes termed Druidism, is a modern spiritual or religious movement that generally promotes harmony, connection, and reverence for the natural world.

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Drumanagh

Drumanagh (Irish Droim Meánach) is a headland near the village of Loughshinny, 20 km north of Dublin, Ireland.

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Drumlithie

Drumlithie is a village in the northeast of Scotland in the area known as the Howe o' the Mearns.

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DSR

DSR may refer to.

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Dubingiai Castle

Dubingiai Castle was a residential castle in Dubingiai, Molėtai district, Lithuania.

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Duboistown, Pennsylvania

Duboistown is a borough in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Duchroth

Duchroth is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Duckworth Overlook

Duckworth Overlook, originally Gerald Duckworth and Company, founded in 1898 by Gerald Duckworth, is an independent British publisher.

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Dugout (shelter)

A dugout or dug-out, also known as a pit-house, earth lodge, is a shelter for humans or domesticated animals and livestock based on a hole or depression dug into the ground.

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Dumitru Berciu

Dumitru Berciu (27 January 1907, Bobaiţa, Mehedinţi – 1 July 1998, Bucharest) was a Romanian historian and archaeologist, honorary member of the Romanian Academy.

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Dumpster diving

Dumpster diving, commonly referred to in the UK and many parts of Europe as totting, skipping, skip diving or skip salvage, is a popular form of modern salvaging of waste in large commercial, residential, industrial and construction containers to find items that have been discarded by their owners, but that may prove useful to the picker.

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Dunbar Rowland

Dunbar Rowland (August 25, 1864 − November 1, 1937) was a noted American attorney, archivist, and historian.

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Duncan Mackenzie

Duncan Mackenzie (1861–1934) was a Scottish archaeologist, whose work focused on one of the more spectacular 20th century archaeological finds, Crete's palace of Knossos, the supposed centre of Minoan civilisation.

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Duncarron

Duncarron is the complete reproduction of a fortified village from the early Middle Ages of Scotland.

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Dunmore Cave

Dunmore Cave is a limestone solutional cave in Ballyfoyle, County Kilkenny, Ireland.

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Dunns Pond Mound

The Dunns Pond Mound is a historic Native American mound in northeastern Logan County, Ohio, United States.

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Dunshaughlin

Dunshaughlin (or locally (St Seachnall's Church) is a town in County Meath, Ireland.

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Dunzweiler

Dunzweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Duppach

Duppach is an Ortsgemeinde (a municipality), part of a group of municipalities called the ''Verbandsgemeinde'' of Gerolstein, which is located in the town of Gerolstein in the Vulkaneifel district of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Dura-Europos synagogue

The Dura-Europos synagogue (or "Dura Europas", "Dura Europos" etc.) is an ancient synagogue uncovered at Dura-Europos, Syria, in 1932.

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Durankulak

Durankulak (Дуранкулак) is a village in northeastern Bulgaria, part of Shabla Municipality, Dobrich Province.

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Dutch East Indies

The Dutch East Indies (or Netherlands East-Indies; Nederlands(ch)-Indië; Hindia Belanda) was a Dutch colony consisting of what is now Indonesia.

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Dutch Gap

Dutch Gap is located on the James River in Chesterfield County, Virginia; it was started as a canal by Union forces during the American Civil War to cut off a curl of the river controlled by Confederate forts.

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Dutchess Quarry Cave Site

The Dutchess Quarry Cave Site is located along NY 17A in the Town of Goshen in Orange County, New York.

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Duval County, Florida

Duval County is a county in the State of Florida.

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Dye

A dye is a colored substance that has an affinity to the substrate to which it is being applied.

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Dynasty of Isin

The Dynasty of Isin refers to the final ruling dynasty listed on the Sumerian King List (SKL).

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Dynge Castle

Dynge Castle (Dynge borgruin), also formerly known as Dyngehus, is a ruined castle in central Bohuslän, Sweden.

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E-Group

E-Groups are unique architectural complexes found among a number of ancient Maya settlements.

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E. C. L. During Caspers

Elisabeth Christina Louisa During Caspers (1 September 1934 – 31 January 1996), known familiarly as Inez During Caspers, was a Dutch archaeologist.

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E. Clive Rouse

Edward Clive Rouse (15 October 1901 – 28 July 1997) was an English archaeologist and writer on archaeology, who specialized in medieval wall paintings.

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E. G. Squier

Ephraim George Squier (June 17, 1821 – April 17, 1888), usually cited as E. G. Squier, was an American archaeologist and newspaper editor.

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Eagle School

Eagle School was an independent, preparatory boarding school for boys aged 7 to 14 years situated in the Vumba Mountains near Umtali, Rhodesia (now Mutare, Zimbabwe).

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Early centers of Christianity

Early Christianity (generally considered the time period from its origin to the First Council of Nicaea in 325) spread from the Eastern Mediterranean throughout the Roman Empire and beyond.

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Early history of Thailand

The known early history of Thailand begins with the earliest major archaeological site at Ban Chiang.

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Early Indian epigraphy

The earliest traces of epigraphy in the Indian Subcontinent are found in the undeciphered inscriptions of the Indus Valley Civilization (Indus script), which date back to the early 3rd millennium BC.

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Early Japanese iron-working techniques

Early Japanese iron-working techniques.

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Early life of Pope Pius XII

Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli, later Pope Pius XII was born March 2, 1876, to Filippo Pacelli and Virginia (Graziosi) Pacelli, in Rome, where he spent his childhood.

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Earth lodge

An Earth Lodge is a semi-subterranean building covered partially or completely with earth, best known from the Native American cultures of the Great Plains and Eastern Woodlands.

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Earth mysteries

Earth mysteries are a wide range of spiritual, quasi-religious and pseudoscientific ideas focusing on cultural and religious beliefs about the Earth, generally with regard to particular geographical locations of historical significance.

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Earth oven

An earth oven, ground oven or cooking pit is one of the most simple and ancient cooking structures.

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Earth's Children

Earth's Children is a series of epic historical fiction novels written by Jean M. Auel set circa 30,000 years before present.

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Eartham Pit, Boxgrove

Amey's Eartham Pit is the original name for the internationally important Lower Palaeolithic archaeological site of Boxgrove in the English county of West Sussex.

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Earthly Branches

The Earthly Branches or Twelve Branches are an ordering system used throughout East Asia in various contexts, including its ancient dating system, astrological traditions, and zodiac.

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Earthwatch Institute

Earthwatch Institute is an international environmental charity founded as Educational Expeditions International in 1971 near Boston (USA) by Robert A. Citron and Clarence Truesdale, then superintendent of Vermont public schools.

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Earthworks (archaeology)

In archaeology, earthworks are artificial changes in land level, typically made from piles of artificially placed or sculpted rocks and soil.

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East Africa

East Africa or Eastern Africa is the eastern region of the African continent, variably defined by geography.

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East Cambridgeshire

East Cambridgeshire (locally known as East Cambs) is a local government district in Cambridgeshire, England.

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East China Normal University

East China Normal University (ECNU) is a comprehensive public research university in Shanghai, China.

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East Slavs

The East Slavs are Slavic peoples speaking the East Slavic languages.

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Eastern Nazarene College

The Eastern Nazarene College (ENC) is a private, coeducational college of the liberal arts and sciences in Quincy, Massachusetts, near Boston, in the New England region of the United States.

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Eastern New Mexico University

Eastern New Mexico University (ENMU or Eastern) is a state university in Portales, Roosevelt County, New Mexico, United States.

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Eastern sigillata A

In archeology, eastern sigillata A (ESA) is a category of late Hellenistic and early Roman terra sigillata.

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Eastern South Asia

Eastern South Asia is a subregion of South Asia.

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Eatonton, Georgia

Eatonton is a city in and county seat of Putnam County, Georgia, United States.

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Eßweiler

Eßweiler (with a short E; also Essweiler) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Eberhard Fjord

Eberhard Fjord is an arm of Seno Ultima Esperanza in the Patagonian region of Chile.

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Eclectus parrot

The eclectus parrot (Eclectus roratus) is a parrot native to the Solomon Islands, Sumba, New Guinea and nearby islands, northeastern Australia, and the Maluku Islands (Moluccas).

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Economy of ancient Tamil country

The economy of the ancient Tamil country (Sangam era: 200 BCE – 200 CE) describes the ancient economy of a region in southern India that mostly covers the present-day states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala.

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Economy of Bulgaria

The economy of Bulgaria functions on the principles of the free market, having a large private sector and a smaller public one.

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Economy of England in the Middle Ages

The economy of England in the Middle Ages, from the Norman invasion in 1066, to the death of Henry VII in 1509, was fundamentally agricultural, though even before the invasion the market economy was important to producers.

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Eday

Eday is one of the islands of Orkney, which are located to the north of the Scottish mainland.

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Edgar Bonham-Carter

Sir Edgar Bonham-Carter, KCMG, CIE (2 April 1870 – 24 April 1956) was a British barrister and administrator in the Sudan and Iraq.

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Edgar Lee Hewett

Edgar Lee Hewett (November 23, 1865 – December 31, 1946) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist whose focus was the Native American communities of New Mexico and the southwestern United States.

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Edgar Peltenburg

Edgar Peltenburg (28 May 1942 – 14 August 2016) was a Canadian archaeologist who specialised in excavations in Syria and Turkey.

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Edicts of Ashoka

The Edicts of Ashoka are a collection of 33 inscriptions on the Pillars of Ashoka as well as boulders and cave walls made by the Emperor Ashoka of the Mauryan Empire during his reign from 269 BCE to 232 BCE.

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Edirne Museum

Edirne Museum is in Edirne, Turkey.

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Edith Eccles

Edith Eccles (born 1910 in Liverpool; died 1977) was a British classical archaeologist who did work at the British School at Athens and worked with Sir Arthur Evans at Knossos on Crete in the 1930s.

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Edith Hamilton

Edith Hamilton (August 12, 1867 – May 31, 1963) was an American educator and internationally-known author who was one of the most renowned classicists of her era.

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Edith Porada

Edith Porada (22 August 1912, Vienna – 24 March 1994, Honolulu) was an art historian and archaeologist, a leading authority on ancient cylinder seals and a professor of art history and archaeology at Columbia University.

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Edith Pretty

Edith May Pretty (1883–1942) was an English landowner on whose land the Sutton Hoo ship burial was discovered, after she had paid a local archaeologist to find out if anything lay beneath the mounds on her property.

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Edith Ross Mound

The Edith Ross Mound is a Native American mound and archaeological site in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Edlingham Castle

Edlingham Castle is a small castle ruin, having Scheduled Ancient Monument and Grade I listed building status, in the care of English Heritage, in a valley to the west of Alnwick, Northumberland, England.

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Edme-François Jomard

Edme-François Jomard (1777 – September 22, 1862) was a French cartographer, engineer, and archaeologist.

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Edmond Pottier

Edmond François Paul Pottier (13 August 1855, Saarbrücken – 4 July 1934, Paris) was an art historian and archaeologist who was instrumental in establishing the Corpus vasorum antiquorum.

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Edmond Saglio

Edmond Saglio (9 June 1828 in Paris – 7 December 1911) was a French archaeologist.

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Edmund Goetze

Edmund Goetze (26 September 1843, Dresden – 18 June 1920, Dresden) was a German literary historian and philologist.

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Edoardo Arborio Mella

Edoardo Arborio Mella (18 November 1808 – 8 January 1884) was an Italian architect, restorer and scholar.

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Eduard Ausfeld

Heinrich Eduard Ausfeld (27 May 1850, Schnepfenthal bei Gotha – 4 April 1906, Magdeburg) was a German archivist and historian.

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Eduard Štorch

Eduard Štorch (10 April 1878, Ostroměř – 25 June 1956, Prague) was a Czech pedagogue, archaeologist and writer, known for novels set in prehistoric Bohemia during Stone and Bronze Age.

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Eduard Hula

Eduard Hula (25 September 1862, in Prague – 26 September 1902, in Vienna) was an Austrian classical archaeologist and epigrapher.

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Eduard Müller (philologist)

Eduard Müller (born in Brieg, 12 November 1804; died in Liegnitz, 30 November 1875) was a German educator and philologist.

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Eduard von Kallee

Eduard von Kallee (26 February 1818, in Ludwigsburg – 15 June 1888, in Stuttgart) was a German Major General and archaeologist.

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Eduardo Pareyón Moreno

Eduardo Luis Pareyón Moreno (December 2, 1921 – March 15, 2000) was a Mexican architect and archaeologist.

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Eduardo Saavedra

Eduardo Saavedra (Eduardo Saavedra y Moragas; February 1829, in Tarragona – 12 March 1912 in Madid), Spanish engineer, architect, archaeologist and Arabist, member of the Real Academia de la Historia, Spanish Royal Academy of Sciences, Real Academia Española and cofounder-president of the Real Sociedad Geográfica.

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Education in Pakistan

Education in Pakistan is overseen by the Federal Ministry of Education and the provincial governments, whereas the federal government mostly assists in curriculum development, accreditation and in the financing of research and development.

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Edward B. Jelks

Edward B. Jelks (born September 10, 1922) is an American archaeologist trained as a prehistorian yet known for his contributions to historical archaeology and leadership roles in multiple anthropological organizations, including the Society for Historical Archaeology and the Society of Professional Archaeologists.

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Edward Barna Kurjack

Edward Barna Kurjack (born 1938; died 2014) was a Mayan anthropologist who was known for his contributions to the study of Mayan settlement patterns and society.

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Edward Barnwell

Edward Lowry Barnwell (1813 – 9 August 1887) was a British antiquarian and schoolmaster who was headmaster of Ruthin School, Denbighshire for 26 years.

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Edward Bleiberg

Edward "Ed" Bleiberg (born 1951) is an American archaeologist and Egyptologist.

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Edward Burnett Tylor

Sir Edward Burnett Tylor (2 October 1832 – 2 January 1917) was an English anthropologist, the founder of cultural anthropology.

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Edward Catich

Edward M. Catich (1906–1979) was an American Roman Catholic priest, teacher, and calligrapher.

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Edward Chiera

Edward Chiera (August 5, 1885 - June 20, 1933) was an Italian-American archaeologist, Assyriologist, and scholar of religions and linguistics.

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Edward Craig Morris

Edward Craig Morris (October 7, 1939 – June 14, 2006) was an American archaeologist who was best known for his Inca expeditions and creating a modern understanding of the Inca civilization.

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Edward Dodwell

Edward Dodwell (176713 May 1832) was an Irish painter, traveller and a writer on archaeology.

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Edward Eugene Claplanhoo

Edward Eugene Claplanhoo (August 8, 1928 – March 14, 2010) was an American Makah elder and former chairman of the Makah Tribe, located on the northwest tip of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state.

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Edward Harris (archaeologist)

Dr.

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Edward Herbert Thompson

Edward Herbert Thompson (September 28, 1857 – May 11, 1935) was an American-born archaeologist and diplomat.

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Edward Impey

Edward Alexander Impey, (born 28 May 1962) is a British historian, archaeologist, and museum curator.

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Edward John Noble

Edward John Noble (October 8, 1882 – December 28, 1958) was an American broadcasting and candy industrialist originally from Gouverneur, New York.

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Edward Lewes Cutts

Edward Lewes Cutts was an English writer, antiquarian and curate, specialising in archaeology and the study of ecclesiastical history.

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Edward Palmer (botanist)

Edward Palmer (1829–1911) was a self-taught British botanist and early American archaeologist.

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Edward Prioleau Warren

Edward Prioleau Warren (30 October 1856 – 23 November 1937) was a British architect and archaeologist.

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Edward R. Ayrton

Edward Russell Ayrton (17 December 1882 – 18 May 1914) was an English Egyptologist and archaeologist.

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Edward Robinson (curator)

Edward Robinson (November 1, 1858 in Boston – 1931) was an American writer and authority on art.

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Edward S. Morse

Edward Sylvester Morse (June 18, 1838 – December 20, 1925) was an American zoologist and orientalist.

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Edward Sapir

Edward Sapir (January 26, 1884 – February 4, 1939) was a German anthropologist-linguist, who is widely considered to be one of the most important figures in the early development of the discipline of linguistics.

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Edward the Martyr

Edward the Martyr (Eadweard, pronounced; 18 March 978) was King of England from 975 until he was murdered in 978.

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Edward Thurlow Leeds

Edward Thurlow Leeds (29 July 1877 – 17 August 1955) was an English archaeologist and museum curator.

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Edward W. Donn Jr.

Edward Wilton Donn Jr. (1868–1953) was a Washington, D.C.-based American architect of the early 20th century.

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Edwardian Farm

Edwardian Farm is a British historical documentary TV series in twelve parts, first shown on BBC Two from November 2010 to January 2011.

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Edwin Atlee Barber

Edwin Atlee Barber (August 13, 1851 – December 12, 1916) was an American archeologist and author.

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Edwin Cuthbert Hall

Edwin Cuthbert Hall (1874–1953) was an Australian physician and philanthropist who through a bequest funded the Edwin Cuthbert Hall Chair of Middle Eastern Archaeology within the Department of Archaeology at the University of Sydney.

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Edwin Hamilton Davis

Edwin Hamilton Davis (22 January 1811 in Ross County, Ohio – 15 May 1888 in New York City) was an American archaeologist and physician who completed pioneering investigations of the mound builders in the Mississippi Valley.

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Edwin John Beer

Edwin John Beer (7 February 1879 – 24 September 1986, aged 107) was a chemist, geologist, mineralogist, archeologist, historian and librarian.

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Edwin M. Shook

Edwin M. Shook (22 November 1911 – 9 March 2000) was an American archaeologist and Mayanist scholar, best known for his extensive field work and publications on pre-Columbian Maya civilization sites.

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Edwin R. Thiele

Edwin R. Thiele (10 September 1895 – 15 April 1986) was an American Seventh-day Adventist missionary in China, an editor, archaeologist, writer, and Old Testament professor.

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Edwin Wyndham-Quin, 3rd Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl

Edwin Richard Wyndham-Quin, 3rd Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl KP PC (19 May 1812 – 6 October 1871) was a British peer, Member of Parliament, and archaeologist.

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Eelam

Eelam (ஈழம், īḻam, also spelled Eezham, Ilam or Izham in English) is the native Tamil name for the South Asian island state of Sri Lanka.

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Eerie, Indiana

Eerie, Indiana is an American television series that originally aired on NBC from September 15, 1991 to April 12, 1992.

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Effigy

An effigy is a representation of a specific person in the form of sculpture or some other three-dimensional medium.

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Egbert Cornelis Nicolaas van Hoepen

Egbert Cornelis Nicolaas van Hoepen (10 November 1884, Vlissingen – 2 May 1966, Johannesburg) was a Dutch paleontologist.

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Eggenberg Palace, Graz

Eggenberg Palace (Schloss Eggenberg) in Graz is the most significant Baroque palace complex in Styria.

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Egnatia Odos (modern road)

Egnatia Odos or Egnatia Motorway (Εγνατία Οδός, often translated as Via Egnatia, code: A2) is the Greek part of European route.

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Egyptian Laws and Legislations Related to Conserving Cultural Heritage in Historic Cairo Area

The conservation process for Cultural heritage in Egypt is subject to the following laws.

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Egyptian medical papyri

Egyptian medical papyri are ancient Egyptian texts written on papyrus which permit a glimpse at medical procedures and practices in ancient Egypt.

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Egyptian temple

Egyptian temples were built for the official worship of the gods and in commemoration of the pharaohs in ancient Egypt and regions under Egyptian control.

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Egyptology

Egyptology (from Egypt and Greek -λογία, -logia. علم المصريات) is the study of ancient Egyptian history, language, literature, religion, architecture and art from the 5th millennium BC until the end of its native religious practices in the 4th century AD.

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Ehrgeiz

, fully titled Ehrgeiz: God Bless The Ring, is a 3D fighting video game developed by DreamFactory and published by Namco in 1998 for the arcade platform.

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Ehud Netzer

Ehud Netzer (אהוד נצר 13 May 1934 – 28 October 2010 5 November 2010 |accessdate.

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Ehweiler

Ehweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Eifel Aqueduct

The Eifel Aqueduct was one of the longest aqueducts of the Roman Empire.

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Eilat

Eilat (help; 'aylaat or 'aylat, also 'Um 'al-Rashrash) is Israel's southernmost city, a busy port and popular resort at the northern tip of the Red Sea, on the Gulf of Aqaba.

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Eilat Mazar

Eilat Mazar (אילת מזר; born September 10, 1956) is an Israeli archaeologist, specializing in Jerusalem and Phoenician archaeology.

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Einar Gjerstad

Einar Nilson Gjerstad (30 October 1897, Örebro – 8 January 1988, Lund) was a Swedish archaeologist of the ancient Mediterranean, particularly known for his work on Cyprus, as well as his studies of early Rome.

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Einar Nerman

Einar Nerman (6 October 1888 in Norrköping – 30 March 1983 Lidingö) was a Swedish artist.

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Einöllen

Einöllen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a type of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Eiríkr Hákonarson

Eric Håkonsson (960s – 1020s) was Earl of Lade, Governor of Norway and Earl of Northumbria.

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Eiríksstaðir

Eiríksstaðir is the former homestead of Eiríkr Þorvaldsson, known as Erik the Red, in Haukadalur in the Dalasýsla region of Iceland.

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Ekrem Akurgal

Ekrem Akurgal (March 30, 1911 – November 1, 2002) was a Turkish archaeologist.

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El Caño, Panama (archaeological site)

The area surrounding the modern village of El Caño contains one of Panama's most important archaeological sites.

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El Chanal

El Chanal is an archaeological site located at El Chanal town, north of the Colima City, Mexico.

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El Guettar, Tunisia

El Guettar (القطار) is a town in central Tunisia in Gafsa Governorate.

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El Hiba

El Hiba (alt. el-Hibeh; Arabic الحيبة) is the modern name of the ancient Egyptian city of Tayu-djayet (t3yw-ḏ3yt), an ancient nickname meaning "their walls" in reference to the massive enclosure walls built on the site.

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El Masnou Municipal Nautical Museum

The El Masnou Municipal Nautical Museum (Museu Municipal de Nàutica del Masnou) is a municipally owned museum, the backbone of which is El Masnou’s relationship with the sea.

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El Mirador

El Mirador (which translates as “the lookout,” “the viewpoint,” or “the belvedere”) is a large pre-Columbian Maya settlement, located in the north of the modern department of El Petén, Guatemala.

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El Paraíso, Peru

El Paraíso (IPA:, "ell pah-rah-EE-so") is the modern name of a Late Preceramic (3500-1800 BC) archaeological site located in the Chillón Valley on the central coast of Peru.

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El Perú (Maya site)

El Perú (also known as Waka'), is a pre-Columbian Maya archeological site occupied during the Preclassic and Classic cultural chronology periods (roughly 500 BC to 800 AD).

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El Rey National Park

The El Rey National Park (Parque Nacional El Rey) is a national park of Argentina, located in the Anta Department, province of Salta, in the Argentine Northwest, 80 km from the provincial capital.

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El Riego phase

The El Riego phase is a Mexican archaeological period in the Tehuacan Valley Sequence that came to pass during the early part of the Archaic period in the Americas.

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El-Amrah, Egypt

El-Amrah is a site about south of Badari, Upper Egypt.

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El-Haria

El Haria is a location and archaeological site in Tunisia North of Kairouan.

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Elagabalus

Elagabalus, also known as Heliogabalus (Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus; 203 – 11 March 222), was Roman emperor from 218 to 222.

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Elaiussa Sebaste

Elaiussa Sebaste or Elaeousa Sebaste (Ελαιούσα Σεβαστή) was an ancient Roman town located from Mersin in the direction of Silifke in Cilicia on the southern coast of Anatolia (in modern-day Turkey).

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Elazığ Archaeology and Ethnography Museum

Elazığ Archaeology and Ethnography Museum is a museum in Elazığ, Turkey The museum is situated in the campus of Fırat University at.

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Eleanor Fitchen

Eleanor Beach Fitchen (October 9, 1912 in Manhattan – April 20, 2009) was an American conservationist, preservationist and philanthropist.

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Eleanor Myers

Eleanor Emlen Myers (1925December 1996) was an American archaeologist.

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Eleanor Scott (archaeologist)

Eleanor Scott (born 8 July 1960) is a British archaeologist and politician.

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Eleazar Sukenik

Eleazar Lipa Sukenik (12 August 1889, Białystok – 28 February 1953, Jerusalem) was an Israeli archaeologist and professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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Electron ionization

Electron ionization (EI, formerly known as electron impact ionization and electron bombardment ionization) is an ionization method in which energetic electrons interact with solid or gas phase atoms or molecules to produce ions.

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Elements of art

A work of art can be analyzed by considering a variety of aspects of it individually.

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Eleni Konsolaki

Eleni Konsolaki, also Eleni Konsolaki-Giannopoulou or Eleni Konsolaki-Yannopoulou (Greek: Ελένη Κονσολάκη-Γιαννοπούλου) is a Greek archaeologist who is renowned internationally and excavated in areas including Troezen, Poros and Methana.

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Eleni Vakalo

Eleni Vakalo (Ελένη Βακαλό; 1921 – 2001) was a Greek poet, art critic and art historian.

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Elevated entrance

An elevated entrance is a type of entrance, common in the design of medieval castles, that is not accessible from ground level, but lies at the level of an upper storey.

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Eli Lilly (industrialist)

Eli Lilly and Company.--> Eli Lilly (April 1, 1885 – January 24, 1977) was a pharmaceutical industrialist and philanthropist from Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.

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Eli Shukron

Eli Shukron(hebrew: אלי שוקרון) is an Israeli archaeologist employed by the Israel Antiquities Authority.

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Eliane Montel

Eliane Montel (1898–1992) was a French physicist and chemist.

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Eliécer Silva Celis

Eliécer Silva Celis (Floresta, Colombia, 20 January 1914 - Sogamoso, 4 July 2007) was a Colombian anthropologist, archaeologist, professor and writer.

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Elisabeth Ruttkay

Elisabeth Ruttkay (18 June 1926 – 25 February 2009) was a Hungarian-born, naturalized Austrian citizen, who was a significant archaeologist specializing in New Stone Age and Bronze Age studies in Austria.

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Elisabeth Schmid

Elisabeth Schmid (1912–27, March 1994) was a German archaeologist and osteologist.

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Elisavet Spathari

Elisavet (or Elisabet or Elsi) Spathari (Ελισάβετ Σπαθάρη) is a Greek archaeologist and author.

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Elise Jenny Baumgartel

Elise Jenny Baumgartel (5 October 1892 – 28 October 1975) was a German Egyptologist and prehistorian who pioneered the study of the archaeology of predynastic Egypt.

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Elizabeth Baldwin Garland

Elizabeth (Betsy) Baldwin Garland is an American archaeologist known for her expertise on Great Lakes prehistory and the archaeology of Michigan.

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Elizabeth Blegen

Elizabeth Denny Pierce Blegen (June 26, 1888 – September 21, 1966) was an American archeologist, educator and writer who contributed the quarterly report, "Newsletter from Athens" for the American Journal of Archeology from 1925 to 1952.

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Elizabeth Brumfiel

Elizabeth M. Brumfiel (born Elizabeth Stern; March 10, 1945 – January 1, 2012) was an American archaeologist who taught at Northwestern University and Albion College.

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Elizabeth Caskey

Elizabeth "Betty" Gwyn Caskey (20 May 1910 – January 1994) was a Canadian-American classical scholar, teacher, and archaeologist, known for her work in the excavations at Lerna and Kea, which are of importance to Greek prehistory.

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Elizabeth Fentress

Elizabeth Barringer Fentress (born 30 October 1948) is a Roman archaeologist who specialises in Italy and North Africa.

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Elizabeth Hartley (archaeologist)

Elizabeth Grayson Hartley, (née Blank, 1947 – 31 January 2018) was an American archaeologist and curator.

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Elizabeth Linington

Barbara "Elizabeth" Linington (March 11, 1921 – April 5, 1988) was an American novelist.

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Elizabeth Mosier

Elizabeth Mosier is an American author and professor at Bryn Mawr College.

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Elizabeth Norton

Elizabeth Norton is a British historian specialising in the queens of England and the Tudor period.

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Elizabeth Rawdon, Countess of Moira

Elizabeth Rawdon, Countess of Moira in the Peerage of Ireland (23 March 1731 – 11 April 1808) was a literary patron and antiquarian; she also held five English peerages in her own right.

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Elizabeth Slater

Elizabeth Slater (13 June 1946 – 11 September 2014) was a British archaeologist specialising in archaeometallurgy.

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Elizabeth Warder Crozer Campbell

Elizabeth Campbell (1893–1971) was an American archeologist, notable for proposing a much earlier date for the presence of man in the desert Southwest than was generally accepted.

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Ellen Swift

Ellen Swift is a British archaeologist and reader at the University of Kent.

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Elli Lambridi

Elli Lambridi (22 January 1896 – 28 January 1970), also spelled Helle Lampride or Helle Lambridis, was a Greek philosopher who wrote extensively in the fields of ancient and modern philosophy.

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Elliott House (Indian Hill, Ohio)

The Elliott House is a historic residence in the city of Indian Hill, Indian Hill Historical Society, 2005-04-17.

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Ellis Minns

Sir Ellis Hovell Minns (16 July 1874 – 13 June 1953) was a British academic and archaeologist whose studies focused on Eastern Europe.

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Elmhurst College

Elmhurst College is a comprehensive four-year private liberal arts college in Elmhurst, Illinois.

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Elpidifor Barsov

Elpidifor Vasilyevich Barsov (Елпидифор Васильевич Барсов, 13 November 1836, v. Loginovo, Nizhny Novgorod Governorate, Russian Empire, — 15 April 1917, Moscow, Russia) was a Russian Empire literary historian, ethnographer, folklorist, archeologist and philologist, specializing in the ancient Russian written language.

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Emamzadeh Esmaeil and Isaiah mausoleum

Emamzadeh Esmaeil and Isaiah mausoleum (امامزاده اسماعیل و مسجد شعیا) is a historical complex in Isfahan, Iran, which dates back to the Seljuk and Safavid era.

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Emanuel Löwy

Em(m)anuel Löwy, or Emanuel Loewy (September 1, 1857 in Vienna – February 11, 1938 in Vienna) was a classical archaeologist and theorist who employed the methodology of universal psychological sources of form in his work.

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Emanuel von Friedrichsthal

Emanuel von Friedrichsthal (January 12, 1809 – March 3, 1842) was an Austrian traveler, daguerreotypist, botanist, and amateur archaeologist, who traveled through the Balkans and in Central America and documented his findings.

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Emanuele Papi

Emanuele Papi (30 August 1959) is an Italian classical archaeologist.

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Emar

Emar (modern Tell Meskene) is an archaeological site in Aleppo Governorate, northern Syria.

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Emeline Hill Richardson

Emeline Hurd Hill Richardson (June 6, 1910 in Buffalo, New York, USA – August 29, 1999 in Durham, North Carolina) was a notable classical archaeologist and Etruscan scholar.

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Emerald Mound Site

The Emerald Mound Site (22 AD 504), also known as the Selsertown site, is a Plaquemine culture Mississippian period archaeological site located on the Natchez Trace Parkway near Stanton, Mississippi, United States.

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Emerson Baker

Emerson "Tad" Baker II (born 18 May 1958) is a historical archaeologist and professor of history at Salem State College.

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Emeryville Shellmound

The Emeryville Shellmound, in Emeryville, California, is a sacred burial site of the Ohlone people, a once-massive archaeological shell midden deposit (dark, highly organic soil, temple and burial ground containing a high concentration of human food waste remains, including shellfish).

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Emil Haury

Emil Walter "Doc" Haury (May 2, 1904 in Newton, Kansas – December 5, 1992 in Tucson, Arizona) was an influential archaeologist who specialized in the archaeology of the American Southwest.

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Emil Ritterling

Emil Ritterling (20 December 1861, in Leipzig – 7 February 1928, in Wiesbaden) was a German historian and archaeologist.

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Emile Clement

Emile Louis Bruno Clement (1844–1928) was a prominent collector of ethnographic artifacts and natural history specimens from northwest Australia at the end of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Emilio Cruz

Emilio Antonio Cruz (March 15, 1938 – December 10, 2004) was a Cuban American Artist who lived most of his life in New York City.

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Emily Vermeule

Emily Dickinson Townsend Vermeule (August 11, 1928 – February 6, 2001) was an American classical scholar and archaeologist.

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Emirati Dialect

The Emirati dialect is a dialectal variety of the Arabic language that is spoken in the United Arab Emirates, and is a branch of the regional Gulf dialects family.

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Emma Clayton

Emma Clayton is a British children's novelist and author of dystopian thrillers, The Roar and The Whisper.

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Emmanuel Pontremoli

Emmanuel Pontremoli (13 January 1865 – 25 July 1956) was a French architect and archaeologist.

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Emmanuel Todd

Emmanuel Todd (born 16 May 1951) is a French historian, anthropologist, demographer, sociologist and political scientist at the National Institute of Demographic Studies (INED) in Paris.

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Empire (graphic novel)

Empire is a 1978 graphic novel written by Samuel R. Delany and illustrated by Howard Chaykin.

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Empty tomb

In Christianity, the empty tomb is the tomb of Jesus that was found to be empty by the women myrrhbearers who had come to his tomb to carry out their last devotions to Jesus' body by anointing his body with spices and by pouring oils over it.

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Enchanted Rock

Enchanted Rock (16710 Ranch Rd 965, Fredericksburg TX) is a pink granite mountain located in the Llano Uplift approximately north of Fredericksburg, Texas and south of Llano, Texas, United States.

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Enclosed cremation cemetery

Enclosed cremation cemetery is a term used by archaeologists to describe a type of cemetery found in north western Europe during the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age.

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Enclosure (archaeology)

In archaeology, an enclosure is one of the most common types of archaeological site.

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Encyclopedia (TV series)

Encyclopedia is a television series created by the HBO Network and the for-profit branch of the Children's Television Workshop (CTW) (now known as Sesame Workshop), Distinguished Productions, Inc.

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Encyclopedia of Serbian Historiography

The Encyclopedia of Serbian Historiography is a one-volume encyclopedia on Serbian historiography and related historical sciences (art history, literary history, ethnology and archaeology), edited by Sima Ćirković and Rade Mihaljčić.

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Enfidha

Enfidha (or Dar-el-Bey, دار البي) is a town in north-eastern Tunisia with a population of approximately 10,000.

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English society

English society is the group behaviour of the English, how they organise themselves and make collective decisions.

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Enkomi

Enkomi (Έγκωμη; Tuzla) is a village near Famagusta in Cyprus.

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Enmebaragesi

Enmebaragesi (cuneiform: EN.ME.BARAG.GE.SI, fl. c. 2500 BC) was a king of Kish, according to the Sumerian king list.

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Ennigaldi-Nanna's museum

Ennigaldi-Nanna's museum is thought to be the first museum by some historians, although this is speculative.

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Enrique de Aguilera y Gamboa

Enrique de Aguilera y Gamboa, 17th Marquis of Cerralbo (1845 – 1922), was a Spanish archaeologist and a Carlist politician.

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ENSAE ParisTech

ENSAE ParisTech (officially École nationale de la statistique et de l'administration économique) is one of the most prestigious French Grandes Ecoles of engineering and a member of ParisTech (Paris Institute of Technology).

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Entrance grave

Entrance grave is a term given by archaeologists to a type of megalithic chamber tomb found in parts of Atlantic Europe, dating the early to middle Bronze Age.

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Environmental archaeology

Environmental archaeology is a sub-field of archaeology and is the science of reconstructing the relationships between past societies and the environments they lived in.

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Environmental history

Environmental history is the study of human interaction with the natural world over time, emphasising the active role nature plays in influencing human affairs and vice versa.

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Environmental magnetism

Environmental magnetism is the study of magnetism as it relates to the effects of climate, sediment transport, pollution and other environmental influences on magnetic minerals.

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Environmental stewardship (England)

Environmental Stewardship is an agri-environment scheme run by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in England which aims to secure widespread environmental benefits.

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Eoin MacWhite

Eoin MacWhite (1923–1972) was an Irish diplomat, archaeologist, and scholar.

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Eolith

An eolith (from Greek "eos", dawn, and "lithos", stone) is a chipped flint nodule.

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Ephraim Stern

Ephraim Stern (January 15, 1934 – March 23, 2018) was an Israeli archaeologist and professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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Epifanio de los Santos

Epifanio de los Santos y Cristóbal, sometimes known as Don Pañong or Don Panyong (April 7, 1871—April 18, 1928) was a noted Filipino historian,Afan, Carolina L. Epifanio de los Santos y Cristobal.

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Epigraphia Zeylanica

Epigraphia Zeylanica is an irregularly published series that deals with epigraphs and other records from ancient Ceylon.

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Epigraphy

Epigraphy (ἐπιγραφή, "inscription") is the study of inscriptions or epigraphs as writing; it is the science of identifying graphemes, clarifying their meanings, classifying their uses according to dates and cultural contexts, and drawing conclusions about the writing and the writers.

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Equestrianism

Equestrianism (from Latin equester, equestr-, equus, horseman, horse), more often known as riding, horse riding (British English) or horseback riding (American English), refers to the skill of riding, driving, steeplechasing or vaulting with horses.

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Equifinality

Equifinality is the principle that in open systems a given end state can be reached by many potential means.

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Equinox Publishing (Sheffield)

Equinox Publishing Ltd is an independent academic publisher founded in 2003 by Janet Joyce and based in Sheffield.

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Eraillure

In lithic analysis (a subdivision of archaeology), an eraillure is a flake removed from a lithic flake's bulb of force, which is a lump left on the ventral surface of a flake after it is detached from a core of tool stone during the process of lithic reduction.

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Eran

Eran is an ancient town and archaeological site in Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh, India.

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Eraser

An eraser, (also called a rubber outside the United States, from the material first used) is an article of stationery that is used for removing writing from paper or skin.

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Erbil

Erbil, also spelt Arbil or Irbil, locally called Hawler by the Kurdish people (ھەولێر Hewlêr; أربيل, Arbīl; ܐܲܪܒܝܠ, Arbela), is the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan and the largest city in northern Iraq.

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Ercole Manfredi

Ercole Pietro Manfredi (2 July 1883 – 9 June 1973) was an Italian architect who lived and worked in early twentieth-century Siam (now Thailand).

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Erdesbach

Erdesbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Erfoud manuport

The Erfoud manuport is a prehistoric manuport in the form of a fossilized fragment of a cuttlefish.

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Eric Birley

Eric Barff Birley"," Society of Antiquaries of London.

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Eric Boman

Eric Boman (June 5, 1867 – November 29, 1924) was a Swedish Argentine archaeologist.

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Eric Breuer

Eric Breuer is a Swiss archaeologist and historian.

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Eric H. Cline

Eric H. Cline (born September 1, 1960) is an author, historian, archaeologist, and professor of ancient history and archaeology at The George Washington University (GWU) in Washington DC, where he is Professor of Classics and Anthropology and the former Chair of the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, as well as Director of the GWU Capitol Archaeological Institute.

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Eric Hotz

Eric Hotz is a graphic artist and illustrator.

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Eric Weinrich

Eric John Weinrich (born December 19, 1966) is an American former professional ice hockey defenseman who played 17 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the New Jersey Devils, Hartford Whalers, Chicago Blackhawks, Montreal Canadiens, Boston Bruins, Philadelphia Flyers, St. Louis Blues and Vancouver Canucks.

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Erich Pernice

Erich Pernice (19 December 1864, Greifswald – 1 August 1945, Freest) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Erich Schmidt (archaeologist)

Erich Friedrich Schmidt (September 13, 1897 – October 3, 1964) was a German and American-naturalized archaeologist, born in Baden-Baden.

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Eridu

Eridu (Sumerian:, NUN.KI/eridugki; Akkadian: irîtu; modern Arabic: Tell Abu Shahrain) is an archaeological site in southern Mesopotamia (modern Dhi Qar Governorate, Iraq).

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Erie Bluffs State Park

Erie Bluffs State Park is a Pennsylvania state park in Girard and Springfield Townships, Erie County, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Erie people

The Erie people (also Erieehronon, Eriechronon, Riquéronon, Erielhonan, Eriez, Nation du Chat) were a Native American people historically living on the south shore of Lake Erie.

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Erika Trautmann

Erika Trautmann-Nehring (1897–1968) was a German archaeologist and illustrator, most noted for her work with Franz Altheim on the petroglyphs of Val Camonica, Italy.

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Eriswell

Eriswell is a village and civil parish of Forest Heath in the English county of Suffolk.

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Erland Nordenskiöld

Baron Nils Erland Herbert Nordenskiöld (1877–1932) was a Swedish archeologist and anthropologist.

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Ernest Arthur Gardner

Ernest Arthur Gardner (16 March 1862 – 27 November 1939) was an English archaeologist.

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Ernest B. Price

Ernest Batson Price (October 13, 1890 – October 20, 1973) was an American diplomat, university professor, military officer, and businessman.

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Ernest Breton

François Pierre Hippolyte Ernest Breton, a French artist and archaeologist, was born in Paris in 1812.

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Ernest Chantre

Ernest Chantre (13 January 1843, Lyon – 24 November 1924, Écully) was a prominent French archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Ernest Desjardins

Antoine Émile Ernest Desjardins (30 September 1823, Noisy-sur-Oise – 22 October 1886, Paris) was a French historian, geographer and archaeologist.

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Ernest Greenfield

Ernest Greenfield was a British archaeologist.

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Ernest Hébrard

Ernest Hébrard (1875–1933) was a French architect, archaeologist and urban planner who completed major projects in Greece, Morocco, and French Indochina.

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Ernest Volk

Ernest Volk (August 25, 1845 – September 15, 1919) was a German-born archaeologist.

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Ernest-Aimé Feydeau

Ernest-Aimé Feydeau (16 March 1821 – 27 October 1873) was a French writer and the father of the notorious comic playwright Georges Feydeau.

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Ernesto de Quesada

Ernesto de Quesada López Chaves (1 November 1886 — 1972) was the Cuban-born impresario who founded Conciertos Daniel, the classical music management agency now known as Hispania Clásica.

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Ernst Bertheau

Ernst Bertheau (23 November 1812, in Hamburg – 17 May 1888, in Göttingen) was a German orientalist and theologian, known for his exegetical studies of the Old Testament.

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Ernst Buschor

Ernst Buschor (Hürben, 2 June 1886 – Munich, 11 December 1961) was a German archaeologist and translator.

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Ernst Christian Walz

Ernst Christian Walz (February 28, 1802 – April 5, 1857) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist born in Münklingen, located in present-day Baden-Württemberg.

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Ernst Curtius

Ernst Curtius (2 September 1814 – 11 July 1896) was a German archaeologist and historian.

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Ernst Dümmler

Ernst Ludwig Dümmler (2 January 1830 – 11 September 1902) was a German historian.

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Ernst Heinrich Toelken

Ernst Heinrich Toelken (June 24, 1795, Bremen – January 26, 1878) was a German anatomist, physicist and archaeologist.

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Ernst Mayr

Ernst Walter Mayr (5 July 1904 – 3 February 2005) was one of the 20th century's leading evolutionary biologists.

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Ernst Pfuhl

Ernst Pfuhl (17 November 1876, Charlottenburg – 7 August 1940, Basel) was a German-Swiss classical archaeologist and art historian.

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Ernst Robert Fiechter

Ernst Robert Fiechter (28 October 1875, Basel – 19 April 1948, St. Gallen) was a Swiss architect and archaeologist.

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Ernst Sellin

Ernst Sellin (May 26, 1867 in Alt Schwerin – January 1, 1946 in Epichnellen bei Eisenach) was a German Protestant theologian.

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Ernst von Herzog

Ernst von Herzog (23 November 1834, Esslingen am Neckar – 16 November 1911) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist, who as an expert in the field of Roman epigraphy.

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Ernst Wahle

Ernst Wahle (March 25, 1889, Magdeburg – January 21, 1981) was a German archaeologist.

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Ernst Weissert

Ernst Weissert, born 20 July 1905 in Mannheim Germany and died 2 January 1981 in Stuttgart was a teacher, general secretary of the Anthroposophical Society in Germany and co-founder and director of the Bund der Freien Waldorfschulen (Federation of free Waldorf schools), the Hague Circle and the Friends of Waldorf Education.

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Errett Callahan

Errett Callahan (born December 17, 1937) is an American archaeologist, flintknapper, and pioneer in the fields of experimental archaeology and lithic replication studies.

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Erskine Beveridge

Erskine Beveridge FRSE FSA(Scot) (27 December 1851 – 10 August 1920) was a Scottish textile manufacturer, historian and antiquary.

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Erwin Walter Palm

Erwin Walter Palm (28 August 1910—7 July 1988) was a German Latin American scholar, historian, and writer.

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Escargot

The escargot (plural escargots,, French for snail) is a delicacy consisting of cooked land snails.

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Eschenburg

Eschenburg is a community in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis in Hesse, Germany.

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Eskişehir Eti Archaeology Museum

Eskişehir Eti Archaeology Museum, a.k.a. Eskişehir Archaeology Museum (Eskişehir Eti Arkeoloji Müzesi), is a national archaeology museum in Eskişehir, Turkey.

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Essaouira

Essaouira (الصويرة; ⵎⵓⴳⴰⴹⵓⵔ, Mugadur), formerly known as Mogador, is a city in the western Moroccan economic region of Marrakesh-Safi, on the Atlantic coast.

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Essenes

The Essenes (Modern Hebrew:, Isiyim; Greek: Ἐσσηνοί, Ἐσσαῖοι, or Ὀσσαῖοι, Essenoi, Essaioi, Ossaioi) were a sect of Second Temple Judaism which flourished from the 2nd century BC to the 1st century AD.

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Este culture

The Este culture or Atestine culture was a Iron Age culture existing from the late Italian Bronze Age (10th-9th century BC, proto-venetic phase) to the Roman period (1st century BC).

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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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Esther Boise Van Deman

Esther Boise Van Deman (October 1, 1862 – 3 May 1937) was a leading archaeologist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Esther de Pommery

Esther de Pommery (was born in Bern) - Countess of Lambrey, is a Swiss activist,Founder of Esther de Pommery Comtesse de Lambrey Foundation.

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Esther Jansma

Esther Jansma (born 24 December 1958) is a Dutch writer and academic.

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Eszter Bánffy

Eszter Bánffy, (born 1957) is a Hungarian prehistorian, archaeologist, and academic.

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Et-Tell

Et-Tell is an archaeological site in the West Bank that is popularly thought to be the biblical city of Ai.

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Eternal Darkness

Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem is a psychological horror action-adventure video game developed by Silicon Knights and published by Nintendo.

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ETH Laboratory of Ion Beam Physics

The ETH Laboratory of Ion Beam Physics (LIP) traces isotopes for archaeological applications such as radiocarbon dating, geology, and pharmaceutical applications The major focus is accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS), and ion beam applications in materials sciences.

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Ethel Portnoy

Ethel Portnoy (March 8, 1927 – May 25, 2004) was a Dutch Jewish writer.

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Ethnic groups in Cambodia

The largest of the ethnic groups in Cambodia are the Khmer, who comprise approximately 90% of the total population and primarily inhabit the lowland Mekong subregion and the central plains.

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Ethnic groups in the Philippines

The Philippines is inhabited by more than 175 ethnolinguistic nations, the majority of whose languages are Malay in origin, then Han Chinese, then European (mostly Spanish).

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Ethnoarchaeology

Ethnoarchaeology is the ethnographic study of peoples for archaeological reasons, usually through the study of the material remains of a society (see David & Kramer 2001).

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Ethnobiology

Ethnobiology is the scientific study of the way living things are treated or used by different human cultures.

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Ethnography (journal)

Ethnography is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering the field of ethnography.

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Ethnological Society of London

The Ethnological Society of London (ESL) was a learned society founded in 1843 as an offshoot of the Aborigines' Protection Society (APS).

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Etowah Indian Mounds

Etowah Indian Mounds (9BR1) are a archaeological site in Bartow County, Georgia south of Cartersville, in the United States.

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Etowah River

The Etowah River is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Etruscan history

Etruscan history is the written record of Etruscan civilization compiled mainly by Greek and Roman authors.

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Etruscan origins

There are two main hypotheses as to the origins of the Etruscan civilization in the Early Iron Age: autochthonous development in situ out of the Villanovan culture, or colonization of Italy from the Near East.

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Etschberg

Etschberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Euan MacKie

Euan Wallace MacKie (born 10 February 1936) is a British archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Eudald Carbonell

Eudald Carbonell i Roura (born 17 February 1953, Ribes de Freser, Girona) is a Spanish archaeologist, anthropologist and paleontologist.

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Eugène Flandin

Jean-Baptiste Eugène Napoléon Flandin (15 August 1809 in Naples – 29 September 1889 in Tours), French orientalist, painter, archaeologist, and politician.

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Eugène Goblet d'Alviella

Eugène Félicien Albert, Count Goblet d'Alviella (10 August 1846 – 9 September 1925) was a lawyer, liberal senator of Belgium and a Professor of the history of religions and rector of the Universite Libre de Bruxelles (ULB).

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Eugène Koeberlé

Eugène Koeberlé (4 January 1828, Sélestat - 13 June 1915, Strasbourg) was a French surgeon to the Faculté de médecine in Strasbourg, earning his agrégation in 1853.

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Eugène Lefèvre-Pontalis

Eugène Lefèvre-Pontalis (–) was a French medievalist and archeologist.

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Eugène-Melchior de Vogüé

Marie-Eugène-Melchior, vicomte de Vogüé (25 February 1848 – 29 March 1910) was a French diplomat, Orientalist, travel writer, archaeologist, philanthropist and literary critic.

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Eugen Bormann

Eugen Ludwig Bormann (6 October 1842, Hilchenbach – 4 March 1917, Klosterneuburg) was a German-Austrian historian, known for his work in the field of Latin epigraphy.

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Eugene F. Lally

Eugene F. Lally (August 14, 1934 – July 28, 2014) was American aerospace engineer.

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Eugene O'Curry

Eugene O'Curry (Eoghan Ó Comhraí or Eoghan Ó Comhraidhe, 20 November 1794 – 30 July 1862) was an Irish philologist and antiquary.

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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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Eunice Stebbins

Eunice Burr Stebbins Couch was an American archeologist who specialized in the ancient coins of Greece.

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European University at Saint Petersburg

The European University at Saint Petersburg (Европейский университет в Санкт-Петербурге), sometimes referred to as EUSP, is a non-state graduate university located in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

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Eva Site

The Eva site (40BN12) is a prehistoric Native American site in Benton County, Tennessee, in the Southeastern United States.

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Evald Rygh

Evald Rygh (26 May 1842 – 9 May 1913) was a Norwegian banker and politician for the Conservative Party.

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Evžen Neustupný

Evžen Neustupný (born 1933 in Prague, Czech Republic) is a Czech archaeologist, educated at the Charles University.

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Everglades National Park

Everglades National Park is an American national park that protects the southern 20 percent of the original Everglades in Florida.

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Evil Dead II

Evil Dead II (also known in publicity materials as Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn) is a 1987 American horror comedy film directed by Sam Raimi and a parody sequel to the 1981 horror film The Evil Dead.

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Evolution of primates

The evolutionary history of the primates can be traced back 65 million years.

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Evolutionary anthropology

Evolutionary anthropology is the interdisciplinary study of the evolution of human physiology and human behaviour and the relation between hominids and non-hominid primates.

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Evolutionary models of human drug use

The use of psychoactive substances is one of the most perplexing human behaviors.

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Evolutionary psychology

Evolutionary psychology is a theoretical approach in the social and natural sciences that examines psychological structure from a modern evolutionary perspective.

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Ewan Campbell

Dr.

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Ewaninga Rock Carvings Conservation Reserve

The Ewaninga Conservation Reserve is a protected area in the Northern Territory of Australia consisting of an area of low sand dunes, rocky outcrops and a claypan about south of Alice Springs.

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Excarnation

In archaeology and anthropology, the term excarnation (also known as defleshing) refers to the practice of removing the flesh and organs of the dead before burial, leaving only the bones.

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Excavation (archaeology)

In archaeology, excavation is the exposure, processing and recording of archaeological remains.

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Excavations at Stonehenge

Records of archaeological excavations at the Stonehenge site date back to the early 17th century.

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Excavations at the Temple Mount

A number of archaeological excavations at the Temple Mount—a celebrated and contentious religious site in the Old City of Jerusalem—have taken place over the last 150 years.

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Exhibition

An exhibition, in the most general sense, is an organised presentation and display of a selection of items.

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Exhibition Centre for the Archaeology of the Emsland

The Exhibition Centre for the Archaeology of the Emsland (Ausstellungszentrum für die Archäologie des Emslandes) is an archaeological museum in Meppen in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Exhumation and reburial of Richard III of England

The exhumation and reburial of Richard III began with the discovery of the king's remains within the site of the former Greyfriars Friary Church in Leicester, England, in September 2012.

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Exhumation of Yagan's head

The exhumation of Yagan's head was the result of a geophysical survey and archaeological dig at a grave site in the Everton Cemetery, Liverpool in 1997.

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Exodus: A Journey to the Mountain of God

Exodus: A Journey to the Mountain of God (Hebrew: אקסודוס, מסע אל הר האלוהים) is a 1992 Israeli documentary film that follows an international group of archaeologists and travelers who go on a camel-back journey looking for the true location of the Biblical Mount Sinai.

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Exorcist: The Beginning

Exorcist: The Beginning is a 2004 American supernatural horror film and the prequel to the 1973 film The Exorcist.

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Exploration geophysics

Exploration geophysics is an applied branch of geophysics, which uses physical methods, such as seismic, gravitational, magnetic, electrical and electromagnetic at the surface of the Earth to measure the physical properties of the subsurface, along with the anomalies in those properties.

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Ezra Clark House

The Ezra Clark House is located on Mill Road in the Town of North East, New York, United States.

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Ezzat Negahban

Ezatollah Negahban (عزت‌الله نگهبان, March 1, 1926 – 2 February 2009) was an Iranian archaeologist known as the father of Iranian modern archaeology.

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Șeitin

Șeitin (Sajtény) is a commune in western Romania, located in the southwest part of Arad County, is situated in the south-western part of the Arad Plateau, in the valley of the Mureş River, and it covers approximately 6680 ha.

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F. H. Gravely

Frederic Henry Gravely (7 December 1885 – 1965) was an eminent British arachnologist, entomologist, botanist, zoologist and student of archaeology, who conducted pioneering research and wrote extensively on various subjects during his tenure at the Indian Museum, Calcutta, and the Government Museum, Madras.

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Fa Hien Cave

Fa Hien Cave, also Pahiyangala Cave is situated in the district of Kalutara, Western Province, Sri Lanka and according to a rural legend, named after an alleged resident during historical times, namely Buddhist monk Faxian (also Fa-Hien, or Fa Hsien).

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Fabio Maniscalco

Fabio Maniscalco (Naples 1 August 1965 - 1 February 2008) was an Italian archaeologist, specialist about the protection of cultural property and essayist.

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Face of the Screaming Werewolf

Face of the Screaming Werewolf is a 1965 horror film created by low budget film maker Jerry Warren by combining parts of two unrelated Mexican horror films (La Casa del Terror (1959) and La Momia Azteca (1957)), and adding new footage which he had shot himself.

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Factions in Revelation Space

This is a list of fictional human factions that are found in the ''Revelation Space'' universe, the setting for a series of stories and novels by Welsh author Alastair Reynolds.

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Faculty of Arts, Banaras Hindu University

Faculty of Arts, Banaras Hindu University is a faculty in the Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India which offers courses in History, Culture, Philosophy, Languages, Literature along with various Professional and Vocational courses.

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Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague

The Faculty of Arts, Charles University, is one of the original four faculties of Charles University in Prague.

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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb

Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences or the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb (Croatian: Filozofski fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu) is one of the faculties of the University of Zagreb.

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Faculty of Social and Human Sciences

The Portuguese Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas (Faculty of Social and Human Sciences - FCSH) is an organic unit of the Universidade NOVA de Lisboa (NOVA) and a legal person under public law, endowed with scientific, pedagogical, administrative and financial autonomy, whose public service mission is to qualify citizens at the highest level.

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Faddan More Psalter

The Faddan More Psalter (Saltair an Fheadáin Mhóir) (also Irish Bog Psalter or "Faddan Mor Psalter") is an early medieval Christian psalter or text of the book of Psalms, discovered in a peat bog in July 2006, in the townland of Faddan More (Feadán Mór) in north County Tipperary, Ireland.

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Fairfield Osborn Preserve

The Fairfield Osborn Preserve is a 450 acre nature reserve situated on the northwest flank of Sonoma Mountain in Sonoma County, California.

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Falefa Valley

Falefa Valley is situated inland on the east side of Upolu Island in Samoa.

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Fallasburg Bridge

Fallasburg Bridge (alternatively Fallassburgh Bridge) is a span Brown truss covered bridge, erected in 1871 in Vergennes Township, Michigan, United States, north of Lowell on the Flat River.

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Falling Creek Ironworks

Falling Creek Ironworks was the first iron production facility in North America.

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Fallon Bowman

Fallon Bowman (born November 16, 1983 in Cape Town, South Africa) is a musician from Ontario, Canada, best known for her involvement with Kittie, Pigface and Amphibious Assault, as well as a solo career.

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Falun Mine

Falun Mine (Swedish: Falu Gruva) was a mine in Falun, Sweden, that operated for a millennium from the 10th century to 1992.

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Fan Llia

Fan Llia is a subsidiary summit of Fan Fawr in the Fforest Fawr section of the Brecon Beacons National Park, Wales.

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Fangmatan

Fangmatan is an archeological site located near Tianshui in China's Gansu province.

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Fanum Voltumnae

The Fanum Voltumnae (‘shrine of Voltumna’) was the chief sanctuary of the Etruscans; fanum means a sacred place, a much broader notion than a single temple.

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Faras Gallery at the National Museum in Warsaw

The Professor Kazimierz Michałowski Faras Gallery at the National Museum in Warsaw is a permanent gallery at the National Museum in Warsaw, presenting Nubian early Christian art.

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Farhad-beg-yailaki

Farhad-beg-yailaki is an archaeological site on the Silk Road in what was the Kingdom of Khotan which is located 60 miles east of its affiliated city, Hotan, China.

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Farin Urlaub

Jan Ulrich Max Vetter, better known as Farin UrlaubEin überdimensionales Meerschwein frisst die Erde auf, p. 71 (from the German "Fahr in Urlaub!" ("Go on holiday!"), after his love for travelling), is a German musician and songwriter.

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Farmana

Farmana Khas or Daksh Khera is an archaeological site in Meham block of Rohtak district in northern Indian state of Haryana spread over 18.5 hectares.

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Farncombe

Farncombe, historically Fernecome, is a village and peripheral settlement of Godalming in Waverley, Surrey, England and is approximately 0.8 miles (1.3 km) north-east of the Godalming centre, separated by common land known as the Lammas Lands.

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Farndon, Nottinghamshire

Farndon is a small village and civil parish on the Fosse road, 2.5 miles (4 km) south-west of Newark-on-Trent, on the banks of the River Trent.

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Farnham, Dorset

Farnham is a village and civil parish in North Dorset, in the south of England, on Cranborne Chase, north east of Blandford Forum.

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Fate (magazine)

Fate is a U.S. magazine about paranormal phenomena.

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Fatehpur district

Fatehpur District is one of the 75 districts of Uttar Pradesh state in northern India.

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Fatu Hiva (book)

Fatu-Hiva - Back to Nature is a book published in 1974 by archaeologist and explorer Thor Heyerdahl detailing his experiences and reflections during a one-and-a-half-year stay on the Marquesan island of Fatu Hiva in 1937-38.

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Faunal assemblage

In archaeology and paleontology a faunal assemblage is a group of associated animal fossils found together in a given stratum.

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Fayoum University

Fayoum University (FU) (جامعة الفيوم, Jame'at al-fayoum) is a public university located in the Egyptian city of Al Fayoum in northern Egypt.

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Fåberg

Fåberg is a village and former municipality in Oppland county, Norway.

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Félicie de Fauveau

Félicie de Fauveau (Livorno, 1801 – Florence, 1886) was a nineteenth-century French sculptor who was a precursor of the pre-Raphaelite style.

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Félix Faustino Outes

Félix Faustino Outes (July 29, 1878 — 1939) was an Argentine anthropologist, archeologist and linguist.

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Félix Ravaisson-Mollien

Jean Gaspard Félix Ravaisson-Mollien (23 October 1813 – 18 May 1900) was a French philosopher and archaeologist.

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Föckelberg

Föckelberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Fürfeld

Fürfeld is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Feces

Feces (or faeces) are the solid or semisolid remains of the food that could not be digested in the small intestine.

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Federation of Archaeological Managers and Employers

The Federation of Archaeological Managers and Employers (FAME) is a professional archaeological body in the United Kingdom.

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Federico Halbherr

Federico Halbherr (Rovereto, then in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, 15 February 1857 – Rome, 17 July 1930) was an Italian archaeologist and epigrapher, known for his excavations of Crete.

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Federico Kauffmann Doig

Federico Kauffmann Doig (born September 20, 1928) is a Peruvian historian and archaeologist.

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Fedir Vovk

Fedir Kindratovych Vovk (Ukrainian Федір Кіндратович Вовк or Russian Фёдор Кондратьевич Волков; 1847–1918) was a Ukrainian anthropologist-archaeologist, the curator of the Alexander III Museum in St. Petersburg.

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Felix A. Chami

Felix A. Chami is an archaeologist from Tanzania.

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Felix Philipp Kanitz

Felix Philipp Kanitz (Bulgarian and Феликс Филип Каниц, 2 August 1829 – 8 January 1904) was an Austro-Hungarian naturalist, geographer, ethnographer, archaeologist and author of travel notes.

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Felix von Luschan

Felix Ritter von Luschan (11 August 1854 – 7 February 1924) was an Austrian doctor, anthropologist, explorer, archaeologist and ethnographer.

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Feminism in Mexico

Feminism in Mexico is the philosophy and activity aimed at creating, defining, and protecting political, economic, cultural, and social equality in women’s rights and opportunity for Mexican women.

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Feminist anthropology

Feminist anthropology is a four-field approach to anthropology (archeological, biological, cultural, linguistic) that seeks to transform research findings, anthropological hiring practices, and the scholarly production of knowledge, using insights from feminist theory.

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Feminist archaeology

Feminist archaeology employs a feminist perspective in interpreting past societies.

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Fenland Survey

The Fenland Survey was an intense archaeological survey of the Fenlands that took place between 1982 and 1989.

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Fenton Wind Farm

The Fenton Wind Farm is a 205.5 megawatt Westwood wind energy project built by enXco (now EDF Renewables), that became operational in the second half of 2007.

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Ferdinand Dümmler

Georg Ferdinand Dümmler (February 10, 1859 – November 15, 1896) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist born in Halle an der Saale.

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Ferdinand Hitzig

---- Ferdinand Hitzig (23 June 1807–22 January 1875), was a German biblical critic.

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Ferdinand Keller (archaeologist)

Ferdinand Keller (December 24, 1800 – June 21, 1881) was a Swiss archaeologist.

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Fereidoon Tavallali

Fereidoon Tavallali or Fereydoun Tavallali (فريدون توللى) 1917, Shiraz - March 1985, Shiraz). Farrokh Tamimil organisation. Accessed 30 May 2010. was an Iranian poet, political commentator, archeologist and considered intellectual.Milani A. Syracuse University Press, 2008 Vol 1 p148., 9780815609070. In poetry, Tavallali is of a second generation of Iranian modernists, the nowpardaz (New Wave poets).Manoukian S. Routledge 2012 p186., 9781136627170.

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Fereidoun Biglari

Fereidoun Biglari (فریدون بیگلری) is an Iranian archaeologist and a museum curator.

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Fermín Chávez

Fermín Chávez (Nogoyá 13 July 1924 – 28 May 2006) was an Argentine historian, poet and journalist, born in El Pueblito, a small town near Nogoyá, province of Entre Ríos.

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Fermi paradox

The Fermi paradox, or Fermi's paradox, named after physicist Enrico Fermi, is the apparent contradiction between the lack of evidence and high probability estimates for the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations.

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Ferry Farm

Ferry Farm, also known as George Washington Boyhood Home Site or Ferry Farm Site, is the name of the farm and home at which George Washington spent much of his childhood.

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Ferrybridge

Ferrybridge is a village in West Yorkshire, England.

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Fertile Crescent

The Fertile Crescent (also known as the "cradle of civilization") is a crescent-shaped region where agriculture and early human civilizations like the Sumer and Ancient Egypt flourished due to inundations from the surrounding Nile, Euphrates, and Tigris rivers.

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Festival of British Archaeology

The Festival of British Archaeology is a fortnight-long festival coordinated by the Council for British Archaeology (CBA).

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Feurs

Feurs is a commune in the Loire department and in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in central France.

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Fewkes Group Archaeological Site

Fewkes Group Archaeological Site (40 WM 1), also known as the Boiling Springs Site, is a prehistoric Native American archaeological site located in the city of Brentwood, in Williamson County, Tennessee.

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Fibrous joint

Fibrous joints are connected by dense connective tissue, consisting mainly of collagen.

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Fibula (brooch)

A fibula (/ˈfɪbjʊlə/, plural fibulae /ˈfɪbjʊli/) is a brooch or pin for fastening garments.

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Field Archaeology Act (Minnesota)

The Field Archaeology Act is a state Act legislating the preservation, interpretation and protection of archaeology in the state of Minnesota, United States of America.

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Field Museum of Natural History

The Field Museum of Natural History, also known as The Field Museum, is a natural history museum in the city of Chicago, and is one of the largest such museums in the world.

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Field research

Field research or fieldwork is the collection of information outside a laboratory, library or workplace setting.

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Field Schools

A field school is a short term academic program – usually taking part during the summer – designed to provide practical training for college students on subjects previously learned theoretically in classrooms.

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Fieldnotes

Fieldnotes refer to qualitative notes recorded by scientists or researchers in the course of field research, during or after their observation of a specific phenomenon they are studying.

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Fields of Science and Technology

Fields of Science and Technology (FOS) is a compulsory classification for statistics of branches of scholarly and technical fields, published by the OECD in 2002.

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Fig Springs mission site

The Fig Springs mission site (8CO1) is an archaeological site in Ichetucknee Springs State Park, in Columbia County, Florida.

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Figa la Sarra

Figa la Sarra is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Fiji

Fiji (Viti; Fiji Hindi: फ़िजी), officially the Republic of Fiji (Matanitu Tugalala o Viti; Fiji Hindi: फ़िजी गणराज्य), is an island country in Oceania in the South Pacific Ocean about northeast of New Zealand's North Island.

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Fiji Tuwawa

Fiji Tuwawa is an online Fijian company that specializes in Pacific research and community consultancy.

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Fildu de Jos

Fildu de Jos (Alsófüld) is a commune located in the southern part of Sălaj County, Romania.

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Filipp Nefyodov

Filipp Diomidovich Nefyodov (Филипп Диомидович Нефёдов, 18 October 1838 in Ivanovo, Vladimir Governorate, Russian Empire – 25 March 1902 in Vladimir Governorate, Russian Empire) was a Russian writer, journalist, editor (Remeslennaya Gazeta, 1875-1876; Russky Kurjer, 1879), ethnographer and archeologist who made hundreds of excavations in Povolzhye, Ural and West Siberia, studying ancient kurgans.

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Filiz Akın

Filiz Akın (born Suna Filiz Akın, 2 January 1943 in Ankara, Turkey) is a Turkish film actress.

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Fill (archaeology)

In archaeology a fill is the material that has accumulated or has been deposited into a cut feature such as ditch or pit of some kind of a later date than the feature itself.

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Final Days of Planet Earth

Final Days of Planet Earth is a 2006 science fiction miniseries directed by Robert Lieberman and written by Roger Soffer.

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Finca Sonador

The Finca Sonador project was launched in 1979 to provide a home for Nicaraguan refugees.

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Find

Find or The Find or Finding may refer to.

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Finding the Fallen

Finding the Fallen is a UK-based documentary TV series by Yap Productions developed for the History Channel / Discovery Channel in which a team of archaeologists, historians and forensic experts work to identify unknown World War I soldiers and finally lay them to rest.

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Fine art

In European academic traditions, fine art is art developed primarily for aesthetics or beauty, distinguishing it from applied art, which also has to serve some practical function, such as pottery or most metalwork.

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Finger Lakes National Forest

The Finger Lakes National Forest is a United States National Forest that encompasses of Seneca and Schuyler counties, nestled between Seneca Lake and Cayuga Lake in the Finger Lakes Region of the State of New York.

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Finglesham

Finglesham is a village in the civil parish of Northbourne, and near Deal in Kent, England, which was the location of the Finglesham Anglo-Saxon cemetery, site of a seventh-century Anglo-Saxon archaeology find known as "Finglesham man," as described in 1965 by Sonia Chadwick Hawkes and Hilda Ellis Davidson.

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Finike

Finike, the ancient Phoenicus (Φοινικοῦς), also formerly Phineka, is a district on the Mediterranean coast of Antalya Province in Turkey, to the west of the city of Antalya, along the Turkish Riviera.

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Finland

Finland (Suomi; Finland), officially the Republic of Finland is a country in Northern Europe bordering the Baltic Sea, Gulf of Bothnia, and Gulf of Finland, between Norway to the north, Sweden to the northwest, and Russia to the east.

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Finnic peoples

The Finnic peoples or Baltic Finns consist of the peoples inhabiting the region around the Baltic Sea in Northeastern Europe who speak Finnic languages, including the Finns proper, Estonians (including Võros and Setos), Karelians (including Ludes and Olonets), Veps, Izhorians, Votes, and Livonians as well as their descendants worldwide.

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Finnish Academy of Science and Letters

The Finnish Academy of Science and Letters (Finnish Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia; Latin Academia Scientiarum Fennica) is a Finnish learned society.

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Finnur Magnússon

Finnur Magnússon, sometimes referred to by the Danish version of his name under which he published, Finn Magnussen or Magnusen, (27 August 1781 – 24 December 1847) was an Icelandic scholar and archaeologist who worked in Denmark.

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Fiona Marshall

Fiona Marshall is an archaeologist at Washington University in St.

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Firavitoba

Firavitoba is a town and municipality in the Colombian Department of Boyacá, part of the Sugamuxi Province, a subregion of Boyacá.

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Fire-cracked rock

In archaeology, fire-cracked rock (FCR) or fire-affected rock (FAR), is rock of any type that has been altered and split as the result of deliberate heating.

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Fire-stick farming

Fire-stick farming was the practice of Indigenous Australians who regularly used fire to burn vegetation to facilitate hunting and to change the composition of plant and animal species in an area.

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Firman

A firman (فرمان farmân), or ferman (Turkish), at the constitutional level, was a royal mandate or decree issued by a sovereign in an Islamic state, namely the Ottoman Empire.

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First American Cave

The First American Cave is an archaeological and palentological site in downtown Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee.

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First Cemetery of Athens

The First Cemetery of Athens (Πρώτο Νεκροταφείο Αθηνών, Próto Nekrotafeío Athinón) is the official cemetery of the City of Athens and the first to be built.

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First Government House, Sydney

The First Government House was the first residence for the Governors of New South Wales in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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First Nations

In Canada, the First Nations (Premières Nations) are the predominant indigenous peoples in Canada south of the Arctic Circle.

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First North Americans

First North Americans are a series of historical fiction novels published by Tor and written by husband and wife co-authors W. Michael Gear & Kathleen O'Neal Gear.

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Fish trap

A fish trap is a trap used for fishing.

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Fishbourne Roman Palace

Fishbourne Roman Palace is in the village of Fishbourne, Chichester in West Sussex.

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Fishing

Fishing is the activity of trying to catch fish.

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Fiskerton, Lincolnshire

Fiskerton is a small commuter village and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.

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Fission track dating

Fission track dating is a radiometric dating technique based on analyses of the damage trails, or tracks, left by fission fragments in certain uranium-bearing minerals and glasses.

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Flake tool

In archaeology, a flake tool is a type of stone tool that was used during the Stone Age that was created by striking a flake from a prepared stone core.

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Flandrian interglacial

The Flandrian interglacial or stage is the name given by geologists and archaeologists in the British Isles to the first, and so far only, stage of the Holocene epoch (the present geological period), covering the period from around 12,000 years ago, at the end of the last glacial period to the present day.

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Flathead Indian Reservation

The Flathead Indian Reservation, located in western Montana on the Flathead River, is home to the Bitterroot Salish, Kootenai, and Pend d'Oreilles Tribes - also known as the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation.

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Flemish organization for Immovable Heritage

The Flemish organization for Immovable Heritage, or simply Onroerend Erfgoed is a cultural heritage agency sponsored by the Flemish Government.

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Fleurie

Fleurie is a commune in the Rhône department in eastern France.

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Flinders Petrie

Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie, FRS, FBA (3 June 1853 – 28 July 1942), commonly known as Flinders Petrie, was an English Egyptologist and a pioneer of systematic methodology in archaeology and preservation of artifacts.

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Flint corn

Flint corn (Zea mays var. indurata; also known as Indian corn or sometimes calico corn) is a variant of maize, the same species as common corn.

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Flintshire Historical Society journal

The Flintshire Historical Society Journal is an annual magazine in English, containing transcripts and articles relating to the county, with book reviews and society notes.

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Flitcham, Norfolk

Flitcham is a village within the civil parish of Flitcham with Appleton in the English county of Norfolk.

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Float

Float may refer to.

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Flora of the Indian epic period

Flora of the Indian epic period can be a tool to study the antiquity of Indian epics as these do not record time scales of the incident mentioned in these.

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Florence M. Hawley

Florence Hawley (September 17, 1906 – 1991) was one of the first anthropologists to work extensively on dendrochronology, or tree-ring dating.

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Florida Caverns State Park

Florida Caverns State Park is a state park of Florida in the United States, part of the Florida State Parks system.

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Florida Museum of Natural History

The Florida Museum of Natural History (FLMNH) is Florida's official state-sponsored and chartered natural-history museum.

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Florida Public Archaeology Network

The Florida Public Archaeology Network, or FPAN, is a state supported organization of regional centers dedicated to public outreach and assisting Florida municipalities and the Florida Division of Historical Resources "to promote the stewardship and protection of Florida's archaeological resources." -- FAQ page FPAN was established in 2004, upon legislation that sought to establish a "Florida network of public archaeology centers to help stem the rapid deterioration of this state’s buried past and to expand public interest in archaeology." -- Chapter 267.145.

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Fokker Universal

The Fokker Universal was the first aircraft built in the United States that was based on the designs of Dutch-born Anthony Fokker, who had designed aircraft for the Germans during World War I. About half of the 44 Universals that were built between 1926 and 1931 in the United States were used in Canada.

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Folkestone services

Stop 24 services is a motorway service station on the M20 motorway at Westenhanger, seven miles from Folkestone in Kent.

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Folsom tradition

The Folsom Complex is a name given by archaeologists to a specific Paleo-Indian archaeological culture that occupied much of central North America.

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Fontainebleau State Park

Fontainebleau State Park is located in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana, on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain.

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Fonthill (house)

Fonthill, also known as Fonthill Castle, was the home of the American archeologist and tile maker Henry Chapman Mercer, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania.

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Food Vessel

Food vessels are an Early Bronze Age, c. 2400-1500BC (Needham 1996), pottery type.

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Foots Cray Meadows

Foots Cray Meadows is an area of parkland and woodland 97 hectares (240 acres) in size, within the London Borough of Bexley, England.

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Foraminifera

Foraminifera (Latin for "hole bearers"; informally called "forams") are members of a phylum or class of amoeboid protists characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm for catching food and other uses; and commonly an external shell (called a "test") of diverse forms and materials.

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Forced circumcision

Forced circumcision refers to circumcision of males who have not given their consent to the procedure.

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Ford Nuclear Reactor

The Ford Nuclear Reactor was a facility at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor dedicated to investigating the peaceful uses of nuclear power.

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Forecourt

In architecture, a forecourt is an open area in front of a structure's entrance.

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Foreign hostages in Iraq

Members of the Iraqi insurgency began taking foreign hostages in Iraq beginning in April 2004.

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Forensic anthropology

Forensic anthropology is the application of the anatomical science of anthropology and its various subfields, including forensic archaeology and forensic taphonomy, in a legal setting.

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Forensic facial reconstruction

Forensic facial reconstruction (or forensic facial approximation) is the process of recreating the face of an individual (whose identity is often not known) from their skeletal remains through an amalgamation of artistry, anthropology, osteology, and anatomy.

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Forensic science

Forensic science is the application of science to criminal and civil laws, mainly—on the criminal side—during criminal investigation, as governed by the legal standards of admissible evidence and criminal procedure.

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Forest Preserve (New York)

New York's Forest Preserve is all the land owned by the state within the Adirondack and Catskill parks, managed by its Department of Environmental Conservation.

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Fornvännen

Fornvännen ("Friend of the Past") is a Swedish academic journal in the fields of archaeology and Medieval art.

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Fort Apache Indian Reservation

The Fort Apache Indian Reservation is an Indian reservation in Arizona, United States, encompassing parts of Navajo, Gila, and Apache counties.

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Fort Atkinson (Nebraska)

Fort Atkinson was the first United States Army post to be established west of the Missouri River in the unorganized region of the Louisiana Purchase of the United States.

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Fort Benjamin Hawkins

Fort Hawkins was a fort built in 1806–1810 in the historic Creek Nation by the United States government under President Thomas Jefferson and used until 1824.

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Fort Canning Hill

Fort Canning Hill, formerly Government Hill, Singapore Hill and Bukit Larangan (Forbidden Hill in Malay), is a small hill about high in the southeast portion of the island city-state of Singapore, within the Central Area that forms Singapore's central business district.

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Fort Clatsop

Fort Clatsop was the encampment of the Lewis and Clark Expedition in the Oregon Country near the mouth of the Columbia River during the winter of 1805-1806.

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Fort de Bertheaume

The Fort de Bertheaume is a fort in Plougonvelin, in the Department of Finistère, France.

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Fort De La Boulaye Site

Fort De La Boulaye Site, also known as Fort Mississippi, is the site of a fort built by the French in 1699–1700, to support their claim of the Mississippi River and valley.

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Fort de Roovere

Fort De Roovere is an earthen fort, constructed as part of the Dutch Water Line, (Hollandse Waterlinie), a series of water-based defences conceived by Maurice of Nassau in the early 17th century.

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Fort Duquesne

Fort Duquesne (originally called Fort Du Quesne) was a fort established by the French in 1754, at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers.

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Fort Frederica National Monument

Fort Frederica National Monument, on St. Simons Island, Georgia, preserves the archaeological remnants of a fort and town built by James Oglethorpe between 1736 and 1748 to protect the southern boundary of the British colony of Georgia from Spanish raids.

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Fort Guijarros

Fort Guijarros (Spanish "Castillo de Guijarros") was a Spanish fort in what is now San Diego, California, USA.

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Fort Hays State University

Fort Hays State University (FHSU) is a public, co-educational university in Hays, Kansas.

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Fort Hill State Memorial

Fort Hill State Memorial is a Native American earthwork located in Highland County, Ohio, United States.

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Fort Kearny

Fort Kearny was a historic outpost of the United States Army founded in 1848 in the western U.S. during the middle and late 19th century.

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Fort Longueuil

Fort Longueuil was a stone fort that stood in Longueuil, Canada from 1690 to 1810.

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Fort Michilimackinac

Fort Michilimackinac was an 18th-century French, and later British, fort and trading post at the Straits of Mackinac; it was built on the northern tip of the lower peninsula of the present-day state of Michigan in the United States.

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Fort Necessity National Battlefield

Fort Necessity National Battlefield is a National Battlefield Site in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, United States, which preserves the site of the Battle of Fort Necessity.

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Fort Orleans

Fort Orleans (sometimes referred to Fort D'Orleans) was a French fort in colonial North America, the first fort built by any European forces on the Missouri River.

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Fort St. Joseph (Niles, Michigan)

Fort Saint Joseph was a fort established on land granted to the Jesuits by King Louis XIV; it was located on what is now the south side of the present-day town of Niles, Michigan.

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Fort Tanjong Katong

Fort Tanjong Katong, which stood from 1879 to 1901, was one of the oldest military forts built by the former British colonial government of Singapore.

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Fort Toulouse

Fort Toulouse (Muscogee: Franca choka chula), also called Fort des Alibamons and Fort Toulouse des Alibamons, is a historic fort near the city of Wetumpka, Alabama, United States, that is now maintained by the Alabama Historical Commission.

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Fort Vancouver National Historic Site

Fort Vancouver National Historic Site is a United States National Historic Site located in the states of Washington and Oregon.

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Fortean Times

Fortean Times is a British monthly magazine devoted to the anomalous phenomena popularised by Charles Fort.

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Forteviot Bronze Age tomb

Forteviot Bronze Age tomb is a Bronze Age burial chamber discovered in 2009 at Forteviot near Perth, Scotland.

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Fortingall

Fortingall is a small village in highland Perthshire, Scotland, in Glen Lyon.

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Fortner Mounds

The Fortner Mounds are a pair of Native American mounds in the central part of the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Fortune Island (Philippines)

Fortune Island is a resort island in Batangas province in the Philippines.

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Foss Leach

Foss Leach CNZM is a New Zealand archaeologist and a pioneer of integrated regional research programmes, conservation of archaeological materials, zooarchaeology, and broader aspects of archaeological science.

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Fossil (novel)

Fossil is a science fiction book written by Hal Clement and first printed in November, 1993.

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Fouke Monster

In Arkansas folklore, the Fouke Monster, also known as the Southern Sasquatch, is said to have been seen in Fouke in Miller County, Arkansas, during the early 1970s.

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Foundation deposit

Foundation deposits are the archaeological remains of the ritual burial of materials under the foundations of buildings.

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Four field approach

The four field approach in anthropology sees the discipline as composed of the four subfields of Archaeology, Linguistics, Physical Anthropology and Cultural anthropology.

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Four occupations

The four occupations or "four categories of the people"Hansson, pp.

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Fractal

In mathematics, a fractal is an abstract object used to describe and simulate naturally occurring objects.

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Fractal analysis

Fractal analysis is assessing fractal characteristics of data.

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Fragments from Antiquity

Fragments from Antiquity: An Archaeology of Social Life in Britain, 2900-1200 BC is a book on the archaeology of Britain in the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Ages written by the British archaeologist John C. Barrett, then a senior lecturer at the University of Glasgow.

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François Bordes

François Bordes (December 30, 1919 – April 30, 1981), also known by the pen name of Francis Carsac, was a French scientist, geologist, and archaeologist.

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François Charpentier

François Charpentier (15 February 1620 – 22 April 1702) was a French archaeologist and man of letters.

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François Désiré Roulin

François Désiré Roulin (August 1796 – 5 June 1874) was a French naturalist, physician and illustrator born in Rennes.

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François Doumergue

François Doumergue (11 May 1858, Carcassonne – 24 December 1938, Oran, Algeria) was a French naturalist remembered for his scientific investigations within the department of Oran.

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François Lenormant

François Lenormant (17 January 1837 – 9 December 1883) was a 19th-century French assyriologist and archaeologist.

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François Pouqueville

François Charles Hugues Laurent Pouqueville (4 November 1770 – 20 December 1838) was a French diplomat, writer, explorer, physician and historian, member of the Institut de France.

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François Thureau-Dangin

François Thureau-Dangin (3 January 1872 in Paris – 24 January 1944 in Paris) was a French archaeologist, assyriologist and epigrapher.

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François Willi Wendt

François Willi Wendt (16 November 1909 – 15 May 1970) was a French non-figurative painter of German origin belonging to the New Ecole de Paris.

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François-Joseph Scohy

François-Joseph Scohy (1831–1881) was a Belgian military physician and archaeologist.

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François-Maurice Allotte de La Fuÿe

François-Maurice Allotte de La Fuÿe (6 November 1844, La Rochelle – 13 February 1939, Versailles) was a French military officer, archaeologist and numismatist.

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François-Xavier Wurth-Paquet

François-Xavier Wurth-Paquet (16 April 1801 – 4 February 1885) was a Luxembourgian politician, jurist, and archaeologist.

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Françoise Claustre

Françoise Claustre (8 February 1937 – 3 September 2006), was a French archeologist who was taken hostage by a group of Chadian rebels, led by Hissène Habré, on 20 April 1974, at Bardaï, in the Tibesti Mountains of northern Chad.

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Frances Berdan

Frances F. Berdan (born May 31, 1944) is an American archaeologist specializing in the Aztecs and professor emerita of anthropology at California State University, San Bernardino.

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Frances Folsom Cleveland Preston

Frances Clara Cleveland Preston (July 21, 1864 – October 29, 1947) was married to the President of the United States Grover Cleveland and was the First Lady of the United States from 1886 to 1889 and again from 1893 to 1897.

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Francesca Ridgway

Francesca Romana Serra Ridgway (born March 9, 1936, in Rome, Italy; died March 7, 2008, in Colchester, Essex (U.K.))Etruscan News v. 10 (spring 2008) http://ancientstudies.fas.nyu.edu/docs/CP/963/etruscan_news_10_version.pdf was a leading twentieth century scholar of Etruscan and Italic archaeology.

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Francesco Carotta

Francesco Carotta (born 1946 in Veneto, Italy) is an Italian writer who developed a theory that the historical Jesus was based on the life of Julius Caesar, that the Gospels were a rewriting of Roman historical sources, and that Christianity developed from the cult of the deified Caesar.

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Francesco Danieli

Francesco Danieli (1981 in Lecce) is an Italian historian and iconologist.

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Francis Andersen

Francis Ian Andersen (born 28 July 1925) is an Australian scholar in the fields of biblical studies and Hebrew.

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Francis Clark Howell

Francis Clark Howell (November 27, 1925 – March 10, 2007), generally known as F. Clark Howell, was an American anthropologist. Born in Kansas City, Missouri, F. Clark Howell grew up in Kansas, where he became interested in natural history. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, from 1944 to 1946 in the Pacific Theater. Howell was educated at the University of Chicago, where he received his Ph.B., A.M. and Ph.D. degrees under the tutelage of Sherwood L. Washburn. Dr. Howell died of metastatic lung cancer on March 10, 2007 at age 81 at his home in Berkeley, California.

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Francis Drake (antiquary)

Francis Drake (January 1696 – 16 March 1771) was an English antiquary and surgeon, best known as the author of an influential history of York, which he entitled Eboracum after the Roman name for the city.

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Francis Farm Petroglyphs

The Francis Farm Petroglyphs are a group of petroglyphs in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Francis Hours

Reverend Father Francis Hours, born 1921 in France and died 1987 was a French Jesuit archaeologist known for his work on prehistory in the Levant.

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Francis J. Haverfield

Francis John Haverfield, FBA (8 November 1860 at Shipston-on-Stour – 1 October 1919) was a British historian and archaeologist.

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Francis Kelsey

Francis Willey Kelsey (May 23, 1858 – May 14, 1927) was a classics scholar, professor, and archaeologist that would go on to lead the first expedition to the Near-East done by the University of Michigan (U of M).

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Francis Lupo

Private Francis Lupo, United States Army (February 24, 1895 – July 21, 1918) is the U.S. service member who was, possibly, missing in action for the longest known period, his remains being recovered in 2003 and repatriated.

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Francis Pryor

Francis Manning Marlborough Pryor, MBE, FSA (born 13 January 1945) is an English archaeologist specialising in the study of the Bronze and Iron Ages in Britain.

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Francis Ronalds

Sir Francis Ronalds FRS (21 February 1788 – 8 August 1873) was an English scientist and inventor, and arguably the first electrical engineer.

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Francis Sacheverel Darwin

Sir Francis Sacheverel Darwin (17 June 1786 – 6 November 1859) was a physician and traveller who was knighted by King George IV.

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Francis Turville-Petre

Francis Adrian Joseph Turville-Petre (4 March 1901 – 16 August 1941) was a British archaeologist, famous for the discovery of the Homo heidelbergensis fossil Galilee Man in 1926, and for his work at Mount Carmel, in what was then the British Mandate of Palestine, now Israel.

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Francisco Arriví

Francisco Arriví (June 24, 1915 – February 8, 2007), a.k.a. Paco, was a writer, poet and playwright known as "The Father of the Puerto Rican Theater.".

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Francisco Nocete

Francisco Nocete (born in 1961) is a Neo-Marxist Spanish archaeologist, a professor of prehistory at the University of Huelva.

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Francisco Ortiz de Vergara

Francisco Ortiz de Vergara (Seville, 1524 – Ciudad Zaratina, 2 December 1574) was a Spanish conquistador and colonizer.

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Franck Goddio

Franck Goddio (born 1947 in Casablanca, Morocco) is a French underwater archaeologist who, in 2000, discovered the city of Thonis-Heracleion 7 km off the Egyptian shore in Aboukir Bay.

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Franco-Cantabrian region

The Franco-Cantabrian region (also Franco-Cantabric region) is a term applied in archaeology and history to refer to an area that stretches from Asturias, in northern Spain, to Aquitaine and Provence in southern France.

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Franjo Maixner

Franjo Maixner (Osijek, August 4, 1841 - Zagreb, March 2, 1903) was a Croatian university professor and rector of the University of Zagreb.

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Frank Bigelow Tarbell

Frank Bigelow Tarbell PhD (January 1, 1853 – December 4, 1920) was a professor of Classic Studies at the University of Chicago from 1893 until 1918.

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Frank C. Hibben

Frank Cumming Hibben (December 5, 1910 – June 11, 2002) was a well-known archaeologist whose research focused on the U.S. Southwest.

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Frank Edward Brown

Frank Edward Brown (b. LaGrange, Illinois, USA, May 24, 1908; d. Marco Island, Florida, February 28, 1988) was a preeminent Mediterranean archaeologist.

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Frank Elgee

Frank Watson Elgee (8 November 1880 in Ormesby, Yorkshire – 7 August 1944 in Alton, Hampshire, England) was a published archaeologist, geologist and naturalist who wrote several books on the North York Moors such as The Moorlands of North-Eastern Yorkshire (1912), The Romans in Cleveland (1923) and Early Man in North East Yorkshire (1930).

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Frank Gardner Moore

Frank Gardner Moore (1865–1955) was an American Latin scholar.

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Frank Hayes (unionist)

Frank J. Hayes (May 4, 1882 – June 10, 1948) was an American miner and president of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) from 1917 to 1920.

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Frank Jewett Mather

Frank Jewett Mather (1868–1953) was an American art critic and professor.

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Frank Kolb

Frank Kolb (born February 27, 1945 in Rheinbach, North Rhine-Westphalia) is a German professor of ancient history at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen in Germany.

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Frank Macfarlane Burnet

Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet, (3 September 1899 – 31 August 1985), usually known as Macfarlane or Mac Burnet, was an Australian virologist best known for his contributions to immunology.

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Frank Moore Cross

Frank Moore Cross, Jr. (July 13, 1921 – October 16, 2012) was the Hancock Professor of Hebrew and Other Oriental Languages Emeritus at Harvard University, notable for his work in the interpretation of the Dead Sea Scrolls, his 1973 magnum opus Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic, and his work in Northwest Semitic epigraphy.

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Frank Panton

Francis Harry "Frank" Panton, (25 May 1923 – 8 April 2013) was a British military scientist, bomb disposal expert and amateur archaeologist who played a key role in the development of the Chevaline nuclear weapons system during the Cold War.

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Frank Soday

Dr.

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Franka

Franka is a popular Dutch comic book series drawn and written since the mid-1970s by the graphic artist Henk Kuijpers.

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Frans Blom

Frans Blom (Frants Ferdinand Blom; August 9, 1893, Copenhagen – June 23, 1963, San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico) was a Danish explorer and archaeologist.

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Franz Boas

Franz Uri Boas (July 9, 1858December 21, 1942) was a German-American anthropologist and a pioneer of modern anthropology who has been called the "Father of American Anthropology".

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Franz Boll (historian)

Franz Christian Boll (17 October 1805, Neubrandenburg – 20 March 1875) was a Lutheran theologian and historian.

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Franz Cumont

Franz-Valéry-Marie Cumont (3 January 1868 in Aalst, Belgium – 20 August 1947 in Woluwe-Saint-Pierre near Brussels) was a Belgian archaeologist and historian, a philologist and student of epigraphy, who brought these often isolated specialties to bear on the syncretic mystery religions of Late Antiquity, notably Mithraism.

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Franz Johann Joseph Bock

Franz Johann Joseph Bock (1823–1899) was a German theologian, archaeologist, and art historian.

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Franz Mone

Franz Mone (born in Mingolsheim near Bruchsal, Baden, 12 May 1796; died in Karlsruhe, 12 March 1871) was a historian and archaeologist.

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Franz Schneider (chemist)

Franz Cölestin Schneider (28 September 1812, Krems – 29 November 1897) was an Austrian physician and chemist.

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Franz Winter

Franz Winter (4 February 1861 in Braunschweig – 11 February 1930 in Bonn) was a German archaeologist.

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Frasier (season 5)

The fifth season of Frasier originally aired from September 23, 1997 to May 19, 1998 on NBC.

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Frau Jenny Treibel

Frau Jenny Treibel is a German novel published in 1892 by Theodor Fontane.

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Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries

Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology (1990) is a book by Kenneth L. Feder on the topic of pseudoarcheology.

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Frauenberg, Rhineland-Palatinate

Frauenberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Frédéric Abbès

Frédéric Abbès is a French archaeologist working on postdoctoral research, specialising in the stone or lithic industry of the Near East and Mediterranean.

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Frédéric Dumas

Frédéric Dumas (14 January 1913 – 26 July 1991) was part of a team of three, with Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Philippe Tailliez, in which he was nicknamed Didi.

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Frédéric Jules Sichel

Frédéric Jules Sichel (14 May 1802 – 11 November 1868) was a German-born, French physician and entomologist.

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Fred B. Kniffen

Fred Bowerman Kniffen (January 18, 1900 – May 19, 1993) was an American geographer and distinguished professor in the Department of Geography and Anthropology at Louisiana State University for over 64 years.

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Fred Noonan

Frederick Joseph "Fred" Noonan (born April 4, 1893; declared missing July 2, 1937 and dead June 20, 1938), was an American flight navigator, sea captain and aviation pioneer who first charted many commercial airline routes across the Pacific Ocean during the 1930s.

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Fred Vargas

Fred Vargas is the pseudonym of Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau (born 7 June 1957 in Paris), a French historian, archaeologist and novelist.

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Frederic G. Kenyon

Sir Frederic George Kenyon (15 January 1863 – 23 August 1952) was a British palaeographer and biblical and classical scholar.

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Frederica de Laguna

Frederica ("Freddy") Annis Lopez de Leo de Laguna (October 3, 1906 – October 6, 2004) was an American ethnologist, anthropologist, and archaeologist influential for her work on Paleoindian and Alaska Native art and archaeology in the American northwest and Alaska.

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Frederick Baker

Frederick Douglas Stephan "Fred" Baker (born 26 January 1965) is an Austrian-British filmmaker, media scholar, and archaeologist.

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Frederick Bligh Bond

Frederick Bligh Bond (30 June 1864 – 8 March 1945), generally known by his second given name Bligh, was an English architect, illustrator, archaeologist and psychical researcher.

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Frederick J. Bliss

Frederick Jones Bliss (22 January 1859-–3 June 1937) was an American archaeologist.

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Frederick Philip Grove

Frederick Philip Grove (February 14, 1879 – September 9, 1948) was a German-born Canadian novelist and translator.

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Frederick Spurrell

The Reverend Frederick Spurrell was the second son, and seventh of eight children, of Charles Spurrell and Hannah Shears (daughter of James Shears, of James Shears and Sons).

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Frederick VII of Denmark

Frederick VII (Frederik Carl Christian) (6 October 1808 – 15 November 1863) was King of Denmark from 1848 to 1863.

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Frederick W. Green (Egyptologist)

Frederick William Green (March 21, 1869–1949) was an English Egyptologist, who worked at a number of sites throughout Egypt.

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Frederick Webb Hodge

Frederick W. Hodge (October 28, 1864 – September 28, 1956) was an editor, anthropologist, archaeologist, and historian.

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Frederik Winkel Horn

Frederik Winkel Horn (19 July 1845 – 17 November 1898), was a Danish historian and translator.

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Fredrik Barth

Thomas Fredrik Weybye Barth (22 December 1928 – 24 January 2016) was a Norwegian social anthropologist who published several ethnographic books with a clear formalist view.

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Free Frank McWorter

Free Frank McWorter (1777–September 7, 1854) was an American slave who bought his own freedom and in 1836 founded the town of New Philadelphia in Illinois; he was the first African American to found a town in the United States.

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Freinsheim

Freinsheim (Palatine German: Fränsem) is a town in the Bad Dürkheim district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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French colonization of Texas

The French colonization of Texas began with the establishment of a fort in present-day southeastern Texas.

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French School at Athens

The French School at Athens (École française d’Athènes, EfA; Γαλλική Σχολή Αθηνών) is one of the seventeen foreign archaeological institutes operating in Athens, Greece.

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Fresnal Canyon

Fresnal Canyon is a major landform feature within the Baboquivari Mountains in the southwestern part of North America.

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Friary, Somerset

The Friary is a small hamlet outside the English village of Freshford, about south of Bath, Somerset.

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Friedrich Adler (architect)

Friedrich Adler (15 October 1827 – 15 September 1908) was a German architect and archaeologist.

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Friedrich Christoph Förster

Friedrich Christoph Förster (24 September 1791 in Münchengosserstädt on the Saale – 8 November 1868 in Berlin) was a German historian and poet.

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Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker

Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker (4 November 1784 – 17 December 1868) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.

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Friedrich Hauser

Friedrich Hauser (Stuttgart 1859–Baden-Baden, 1917) was a German classical archaeologist and art historian.

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Friedrich Karl Dörner

Friedrich Karl Dörner (born February 28, 1911 in Gelsenkirchen, died March 10, 1992) was a German classics, epigrapher and Classical Archeologist.

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Friedrich Kasiski

Major Friedrich Wilhelm Kasiski (29 November 1805 – 22 May 1881) was a German infantry officer, cryptographer and archeologist.

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Friedrich Matz

Friedrich Matz (13 October 1843, in Lübeck – 30 December 1874, in Berlin) was a German archaeologist.

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Friedrich Maurer (linguist)

Friedrich Maurer (5 January 1898 – 7 November 1984) was a German linguist and medievalist.

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Friedrich Sarre

Friedrich Paul Theodor Sarre (22 June 1865, Berlin – 31 May 1945, Neubabelsberg) was a German Orientalist, archaeologist and art historian.

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Friedrich von Duhn

Friedrich von Duhn (17 April 1851 in Lübeck – 5 February 1930 in Heidelberg) was a German Classical archaeologist who taught at the University of Heidelberg, where he headed the Institut für Klassische Archäologie (1879–1920); his most memorable feat was in recognizing scattered fragments of sculpture as the remains of Augustus' Ara Pacis.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Eduard Gerhard

Friedrich Wilhelm Eduard Gerhard (29 November 1795 – 12 May 1867) was a German archaeologist.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Heidenreich

Friedrich Wilhelm Heidenreich (2 September 1798 in Roßtal – 6 December 1857 in Ansbach) was a German physician.

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Friedrich Wilhelm von Bissing

Friedrich Wilhelm von Bissing (22 April 1873, Potsdam – 12 January 1956, Oberaudorf am Inn) was a German Egyptologist.

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Friends of Bank Hall

The Friends of Bank Hall is the new charitable name for the former Bank Hall Action Group who are a voluntary group which aims to raise public awareness and secure the future restoration of Bank Hall, a Jacobean mansion house and gardens, near the banks of the River Douglas, in Bretherton, Lancashire.

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Fritz Eichler

Fritz Eichler (October 12, 1887 - January 16, 1971) was an Austrian archaeologist.

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Fritz Schöll

Friedrich (Fritz) Schöll (8 February 1850 in Weimar – 14 September 1919 in Rottweil) was a German classical philologist, known for his editions of Plautus, Varro and Cicero.

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Froelich Rainey

Froelich Gladstone Rainey (June 18, 1907 – October 11, 1992) was an American anthropologist and a master of narrative prose.

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Frohnhofen

Frohnhofen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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FROLINAT

FROLINAT (Front de Libération Nationale du Tchad; National Liberation Front of Chad) was an insurgent rebel group that was active in Chad between 1966 and 1993.

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Fugitive Pieces (film)

Fugitive Pieces is a 2007 Canadian drama film directed by Jeremy Podeswa, who also adapted the film from the novel of the same name written by Anne Michaels.

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Fuglafjørður

Fuglafjørður (Fuglefjord) is a village on Eysturoy's east coast in the Faroe Islands.

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Fulvio Orsini

Fulvio Orsini (11 December 1529 – 18 May 1600) was an Italian humanist, historian, and archaeologist.

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Funeral bundle

A funeral bundle is a method of enclosing a corpse before burial, practiced by the Paracas culture of the Peruvian Andes.

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Funtanaccia

Funtanaccia is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Futari wa Pretty Cure Splash Star

, often shortened simply to PreCure Splash Star, is a magical girl anime series produced by Toei Animation and Asahi Broadcasting Corporation, which aired in Japan TV Asahi's ANN network between February 5, 2006 and January 28, 2007.

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Fyodor Petrovich Tolstoy

Count Fyodor Petrovich Tolstoy (Фёдор Петрович Толстой; 21 February 1783 – 25 April 1873) was a Russian artist who served as Vice-President of the Imperial Academy of Arts for forty years (1828–1868).

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Fyssen Foundation

The Fyssen Foundation (French: Fondation Fyssen) is a French charitable organization that was established and endowed in 1979 by H. Fyssen.

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G. A. Beazeley

Lieutenant-Colonel George Adam Beazeley DSO (7 July 1870 – 8 May 1961) was a British Army officer, surveyor and one of the fathers of aerial photography in surveying, military reconnaissance and archaeology.

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G. R. Sharma

G.R.Sharma was a Historian from Allahabad University who led the Kausambi excavations which added to original historical research in the country.

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G. Venkatasubbiah

Ganjam Venkatasubbiah (born 23 August 1913) is a Kannada writer, grammarian, editor, lexicographer and critic who has compiled over eight dictionaries, authored four seminal works on dictionary science in Kannada, edited over sixty books and published several papers.

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Gabarnmung

Gabarnmung, or Nawarla Gabarnmung, is an Aboriginal archaeological and rock art site in south-western Arnhem Land, in the Top End of Australia’s Northern Territory.

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Gabol

The Gabol (گبول) is a Baloch tribe having a distinct identity through the centuries, and not a branch of any other Baloch tribe.

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Gabriel Barkay

Gabriel Barkay (sometimes spelled Barkai) is an Israeli archaeologist.

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Gabriel Byrne

Gabriel James Byrne (born 12 May 1950) is an Irish actor, film director, film producer, writer, cultural ambassador and audiobook narrator.

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Gabriel Gustafson

Gabriel Adolf Gustafson (8August 185316April 1915) was a Swedish-Norwegian archaeologist.

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Gabriel Milan

Gabriel Milan (or Gavrī'el Mil'ō (גבריאל מילאו), c 1631 – 26 March 1689) was governor of the Danish West Indies (now known as the U.S. Virgin Islands) from 7 May 1684 to 27 February 1686.

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Gabriel Welter

Franz Gabriel Welter (16 May 1890 – 2 August 1954) was a German archaeologist.

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Gabriela Adameșteanu

Gabriela Adameșteanu (born April 2, 1942) is a Romanian novelist, short story writer, essayist, journalist, and translator.

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Gaby Mazor

Gabriel (Gaby) Mazor (גבריאל מזור; born February 16, 1944) is an Israeli archaeologist working for the Israel Antiquities Authority.

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Gaer Fawr, Llanilar

Gaer Fawr is an Iron Age hill fort located near Llanilar, Ceredigion, Wales; the Ordnance Survey grid reference is SN648718.

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Gaetano Cara

Gaetano Cara (1803 – 1877) was an Italian archaeologist and naturalist primarily interested in ornithology.

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Gail Ashley

Gail Ashley, née Mowry, (born 29 January 1941) is an American sedimentologist.

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Gail Carriger

Gail Carriger is the pen name of Tofa Borregaard, an American archaeologist and author of steampunk fiction.

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Gail Vance Civille

Gail Vance Civille (born 1943) is a pioneer in advanced sensory evaluation approaches for industry, academia and government.

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Gala- State Historical Ethnographic Reserve

The Gala State Historical Ethnographic Reserve is a complex of museums in Baku, Azerbaijan.

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Gale Sieveking

Gale de Giberne Sieveking (26 August 1925 – 2 June 2007) was a prehistoric archaeologist, best known for his work on flint and flint mines, particularly at sites such as Grimes Graves.

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Galen University

Galen University is an independent university in Belize, Central America, with sustainable development as one of its core values.

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Galera, Granada

Galera is a municipality in the comarca of Huéscar, province of Granada, autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain, roughly from the provincial capital, Granada.

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Galisteo Basin

The Galisteo Basin is a surface basin and a closely related groundwater basin in north-central New Mexico. Its primary watercourse is the Galisteo River or Galisteo Creek, a perennial stream, for part of its course, that flows from the eastern highlands down into the Rio Grande about three miles above the Santo Domingo Pueblo.

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Gallina

The Gallina or Largo-Gallina culture was an occupation sequence during the pre-Hispanic period in the American Southwest from approximately 1050 to 1300.

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Galvez, Louisiana

Galvez is an unincorporated community in Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States, ten miles (16 km) southeast of Baton Rouge.

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Galway Archaeological and Historical Society

The Galway Archaeological and Historical Society was founded on 21 March 1900, at the Railway Hotel, Galway.

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Galway City Museum

Galway City Museum (Músaem Cathrach na Gaillimhe) is a museum in Galway City, County Galway, Ireland.

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Galyani Vadhana

Galyani Vadhana, Princess of Naradhiwas (กัลยาณิวัฒนา;;; 6 May 1923 – 2 January 2008) was a princess of Thailand and the elder sister of King Ananda Mahidol (Rama VIII) and King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX).

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Gambell Sites

The Gambell Sites are five archeological sites which established a chronology of over 2000 years of human habitation on St. Lawrence Island near Gambell, Alaska.

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Gambia National Museum

The Gambia National Museum is a Gambian cultural museum located in Banjul.

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Gambier Islands

The Gambier Islands are a populated (1319 people), small group of islands, remnants of a caldera along with islets on the surrounding fringing reef, in French Polynesia, located at the southeast terminus of the Tuamotu archipelago.

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Game mechanics

Game mechanics are constructs of rules or methods designed for interaction with the game state, thus providing gameplay.

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Garbology

Garbology is the study of modern refuse and trash as well as the use of trash cans, compactors and various types of trash can liners.

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Gardberg site

Gardberg Site (Gardbergfeltet) is an archaeological site located east of the Einang Sound in the municipality of Vestre Slidre, Oppland County, Norway.

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Garden of the gods (Sumerian paradise)

The concept of a Garden of the gods or a divine paradise might be of Sumerian origin, or so it is argued by Samuel Noah Kramer.

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Gardens of Vatican City

The Gardens of Vatican City (Horti Civitatis Vaticanae) also informally known as the Vatican Gardens (Giardini Vaticani) in Vatican City are private urban gardens and parks which cover more than half of the country, located in the west of the territory and owned by the Pope.

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Gareth Alun Owens

Gareth Alun Owens (born 1964) is a British-Greek academic, currently serving as Associate Director and «Erasmus/Socrates» Manager/Tutor of the International Relations Office TEI of Crete and as Associate Professor of Hellenic Culture -- History, Language and Civilization.

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Garuda (2004 film)

Garuda (in Thailand known as Paksa wayu) is a 2004 Thai Kaiju film.

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Garum

Garum was a fermented fish sauce used as a condiment in the cuisines of ancient Greece, Rome, and later Byzantium.

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Gary M. Feinman

Gary M. Feinman (born 1951) is an American archaeologist, and the MacArthur Curator of Mesoamerican, Central American, and East Asian Anthropology at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.

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Gate of Ivory, Gate of Horn

Gate of Ivory, Gate of Horn is a fantasy novel by British author Robert Holdstock.

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Gates of Delhi

The Gates of Delhi were built in Delhi, India, under dynastic rulers in the period that could be dated from the 8th century to the 20th century.

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Gateways (organization)

Gateways is an international organization whose self-declared mission is it to "raise Jewish consciousness.".

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Gathering seafood by hand

Gathering seafood by hand can be as easy as picking shellfish or kelp up off the beach, or doing some digging for clams or crabs, or perhaps diving under the water for abalone or lobsters.

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Gavin Hamilton (artist)

Gavin Hamilton (1723, Lanarkshire – 4 January 1798, Rome) was a Scots neoclassical history painter, who is more widely remembered for his hunts for antiquities in the neighbourhood of Rome.

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Gavin Maxwell

Gavin Maxwell FRSL, FIAL, FZS (Sc.), FRGSThe Rocks Remain, Gavin Maxwell, Longmans, 1963, ASIN: B0000CLY9N (15 July 19147 September 1969) was a Scottish naturalist and author, best known for his nonfiction writing and his work with otters.

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Gaziantep Museum of Archaeology

The Gaziantep Museum of Archaeology (Gaziantep Arkeoloji Müzesi) is an archaeological museum located in the city of Gaziantep, Turkey.

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Géomorphologie

Geomorphologie is a quarterly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research on geomorphology and allied disciplines such as archaeology, physical geography, ecology and other Earth sciences.

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Göbekli Tepe

Göbekli Tepe, Turkish for "Potbelly Hill", is an archaeological site in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey, approximately northeast of the city of Şanlıurfa.

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Gösenroth

Gösenroth is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Göttingen

Göttingen (Low German: Chöttingen) is a university city in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Götz Adriani

Götz Adriani (born 21 November 1940 in Stuttgart) is a German art historian.

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Gebel el-Silsila

Gebel el-Silsila or Gebel Silsileh (Arabic: جبل السلسلة - Jabal al-Silsila or Ǧabal as-Silsila - "Chain of Mountains" or "Series of Mountains"; Egyptian: ẖny, Khenyt,Kitchen (1983). Kheny or Khenu - "The Place of Rowing"; German: Dschabal as-Silsila - "Ruderort", or "Ort des Ruderns" - "Place of Rowing"; Italian: Gebel Silsila - "Monte della Catena" - "Upstream Mountain Chain") is 65 km north of Aswan in Upper Egypt, where the cliffs on both sides close to the narrowest point along the length of the entire Nile.

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Gebroth

Gebroth is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Geldrop

Geldrop is a town in the Dutch province of North Brabant.

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Gelli, Rhondda

Gelli is a village in the Rhondda Fawr valley, in the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taff, Wales, situated on the southern bank of the Rhondda Fawr River.

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Gemstone

A gemstone (also called a gem, fine gem, jewel, precious stone, or semi-precious stone) is a piece of mineral crystal which, in cut and polished form, is used to make jewelry or other adornments.

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Gender (stream)

The Gender is a stream in the Dutch province of North Brabant.

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General Services Administration

The General Services Administration (GSA), an independent agency of the United States government, was established in 1949 to help manage and support the basic functioning of federal agencies.

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Genesee County, New York

Genesee County is a county in the U.S. state of New York.

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Genetic history of Europe

The genetic history of Europe since the Upper Paleolithic is inseparable from that of wider Western Eurasia.

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Gennady Zdanovich

Gennadii Zdanovich (born 4 October 1938; Russian: Геннадий Борисович Зданович) is a Russian archaeologist based at the historical site of Arkaim, Chelyabinsk.

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Genomics of domestication

Domesticated species and the human populations that domesticate them are typified by a mutualistic relationship of interdependence, in which humans have over thousands of years modified the genomics of domesticated species.

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Geoarchaeology

Geoarchaeology is a multi-disciplinary approach which uses the techniques and subject matter of geography, geology and other Earth sciences to examine topics which inform archaeological knowledge and thought.

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Geoff Bailey

Geoff Bailey is a British archaeologist.

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Geoff Holder

Geoff Holder is a British author.

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Geoffrey Ashe

Geoffrey Thomas Leslie Ashe (born 29 March 1923) is a British cultural historian and lecturer, known for his focus on King Arthur.

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Geoffrey Bibby

Thomas Geoffrey Bibby (14 October 1917 – 6 February 2001, Aarhus) was an English-born archaeologist.

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Geoffrey Bushnell

Geoffrey Hext Sutherland Bushnell, FBA (31 May 1903 – 26 December 1978) was a British archaeologist.

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Geoffrey Irwin

Geoffrey Irwin (born 1941) is a professor of archaeology at the University of Auckland.

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Geographic information system

A geographic information system (GIS) is a system designed to capture, store, manipulate, analyze, manage, and present spatial or geographic data.

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Geography of Egypt

The geography of Egypt relates to two regions: North Africa and Southwest Asia.

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Geography of Iowa

This article is about the geography of the State of Iowa.

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Geography of Prince Edward Island

Prince Edward Island's geography is mostly pastoral with red soil, white sand, and scattered communities.

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Geomorphology

Geomorphology (from Ancient Greek: γῆ, gê, "earth"; μορφή, morphḗ, "form"; and λόγος, lógos, "study") is the scientific study of the origin and evolution of topographic and bathymetric features created by physical, chemical or biological processes operating at or near the Earth's surface.

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Geophysical survey

Geophysical survey is the systematic collection of geophysical data for spatial studies.

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Geophysical survey (archaeology)

In archaeology, geophysical survey is ground-based physical sensing techniques used for archaeological imaging or mapping.

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Geoprofessions

Geoprofessions is a term coined by the Geoprofessional Business Association to connote various technical disciplines that involve engineering, earth and environmental services applied to below-ground (“subsurface”), ground-surface, and ground-surface-connected conditions, structures, or formations.

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Georg Anton Rollett

Georg Anton Rollett (2 August 1778 – 19 March 1842) was an Austrian naturalist and physician born in Baden bei Wien, Niederösterreich.

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Georg Büchmann

Georg Büchmann (4 January 1822 – 24 February 1884) was a German philologist.

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Georg Bühler

Professor Johann Georg Bühler (July 19, 1837 – April 8, 1898) was a scholar of ancient Indian languages and law.

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Georg F.L. Sarauw

Georg Frederik Ludvig Sarauw (12 November 1862 – 17 February 1928) was a Danish-Swedish botanist and archaeologist.

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Georg Fabricius

Georg Fabricius (23 April 1516 – 17 July 1571), born Georg Goldschmidt, was a Protestant German poet, historian and archaeologist who wrote in Latin on age of German Renaissance.

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Georg Friedrich Creuzer

Georg Friedrich Creuzer (10 March 1771 – 6 February 1858) was a German philologist and archaeologist.

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Georg Karo

Georg Karo (11 January 1872, in Venice – 12 November 1963, in Freiburg im Breisgau) was a German archaeologist, known for his research of Mycenaean and Etruscan cultures.

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Georg Lippold

Georg Lippold (February 21, 1885 – July 23, 1954) was a German classical archaeologist born in Mainz.

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Georg Loeschcke

Georg Loeschcke (28 June 1852 – 26 November 1915) was a German archaeologist born in Penig, Saxony.

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Georg Ludwig Kriegk

Georg Ludwig Kriegk (February 25, 1805 – May 28, 1878) was a German historian and archivist born in Darmstadt.

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Georg Zoëga

Jørgen Zoëga (20 December 1755 – 10 February 1809) was a Danish archaeologist and numismatist; born at Daler near Tønder, near the west coast of northern Schleswig.

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George Aaron Barton

Reverend George Aaron Barton, Ph.D. (12 November 1859 – 28 June 1942) was a Canadian author, Episcopal clergyman, and professor of Semitic languages and the history of religion.

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George Alexander Pyke, Lord Tilbury

George Alexander Pyke, Lord Tilbury is a recurring fictional character in the stories of British comic writer P. G. Wodehouse.

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George Andrew Reisner

George Andrew Reisner (November 5, 1867 – June 6, 1942) was an American archaeologist of Ancient Egypt, Nubia and Palestine.

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George Augustus Auden

George Augustus Auden (27 August 1872 – 3 May 1957) was an English physician, professor of public health, school medical officer, and writer on archaeological subjects.

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George Bell & Sons

George Bell & Sons was a book publishing house located in London, United Kingdom, from 1839 to 1986.

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George Bidie

Surgeon General George Bidie CIE (3 April 1830 – 19 February 1913) was a British physician who worked in India in the Madras Medical Service.

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George Byron Gordon (archaeologist)

George Byron Gordon (1870–1927) was a Canadian-American archaeologist, who graduated from Harvard University in 1894.

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George Carr Frison

George Carr Frison (born November 11, 1924) is an American archaeologist.

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George Cœdès

George Cœdès (10 August 1886 – 2 October 1969) was a 20th-century French scholar of southeast Asian archaeology and history.

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George Cowgill

George L. Cowgill (born 1929) is an American anthropologist and archaeologist.

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George E. Mendenhall

George Emery Mendenhall (August 13, 1916 – August 5, 2016) was an American Biblical scholar who taught at the University of Michigan's Department of Near Eastern Studies.

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George Edward Bonsor Saint Martin

George Edward Bonsor Saint Martin (Lille, France, 30 March 1855 – 15 August 1930, Mairena del Alcor, Spain) was a French-born British archaeologist, historian, and painter who spent time in Spain painting and later as an archaeologist.

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George El Andary

Dr.

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George Eogan

George Eogan is an Irish archaeologist.

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George Escol Sellers

George Escol Sellers (November 26, 1808 – January 1, 1899) was an American businessman, mechanical engineer, and inventor.

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George Ewart Bean

George Ewart Bean (1903 – 7 December 1977) was an English archaeologist and writer who specialized in classical Turkey.

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George F. Carter

George Francis Carter (6 April 1912 – 16 March 2004) was an American professor of geography who taught at Johns Hopkins University and later Texas A&M University.

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George Groslier

George Groslier ((zhorzh gro-lyay) (February 4, 1887, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia – June 18, 1945, in Phnom Penh) was a French polymath who – through his work as a painter, writer, historian, archaeologist, ethnologist, architect, photographer and curator – studied, described, popularized and worked to preserve the arts, culture and history of the Khmer Empire of Cambodia. Born in Phnom Penh to a French civil servant – he was the first French child ever born in Cambodia – Groslier was taken by his mother to France at the age of two and grew up in Marseilles. Aspiring to become a painter, he tried but failed to win the prestigious Prix de Rome. Shortly afterwards, he returned to Cambodia, on a mission from the Ministry of Education. There he met and befriended a number of French scholars of traditional Cambodian culture. Under their influence, he wrote and published, in France in 1913, his initial book on this subject: Danseuses Cambodgiennes – Anciennes et Modernes (Cambodian Dancers – Ancient and Modern). It was the very first scholarly work ever published in any language on Cambodian dance. He then returned to Cambodia, traveling the length and breadth of the country to examine its ancient monuments and architecture. From this experience came his book A l'ombre d 'Angkor; notes et impressions sur les temples inconnus de l'ancien Cambodge (In the Shadow of Angkor: Notes and Impressions on the Unknown Temples of Ancient Cambodia). In June 1914, Groslier enlisted in the French army and was employed as a balloonist in the early part of World War I. It was during this time that he met and married sportswoman Suzanne Cecile Poujade; they eventually had three children. He was ultimately reassigned to French Indochina because of his knowledge of the Khmer language. Upon his arrival in Phnom Penh in May 1917, he was charged with a new mission: to found a new Cambodian art museum and organize a school of Cambodian arts. From 1917 to his retirement in 1942, Groslier changed the focus of his work from that of merely describing Cambodian culture for a European audience to what he called a "rescue mission" to save the indigenous national art forms of Cambodia from destruction. His vision for the museum was to build collections from the full range of Cambodia’s traditional works of art. At the art school, Groslier did not try to make the native culture adapt to that of the colonizing power; on the contrary, he insisted that the school be run by Cambodians for Cambodians and that no European influence be allowed. He was also intolerant of any attempts by Europeans to loot or damage native art. In 1923, the 22-year-old writer André Malraux, later to become world-famous, removed some bas-relief statues from a 10th Century temple, Banteay Srei, with the intention of selling them to an art museum. Although Malraux claimed that he was acting within the law, Groslier immediately had him arrested, scarring the former's reputation in Indochina. Groslier would later contemptuously refer to Malraux as "le petit voleur" ("the little thief"). Between 1920 and 1939, Groslier's family frequently traveled between France and Cambodia so that the three children could attend schools in France. In 1939, however, events leading up to the Second World War made such travel increasingly dangerous, and Suzanne was forced to remain in France with their two sons, while Nicole, their daughter, stayed with her father in Cambodia. When the Japanese military occupied Cambodia, because French colonies were then administered by the pro-Axis Vichy regime, violence was initially avoided. But in March 1945, as the Allies made further advances in Asia, the Japanese relieved French officials of their authority, rounded up all foreign nationals, and placed them under guard in concentration camps. Because of his known enthusiasm for shortwave radio, Groslier was suspected by the Japanese of being part of the anti-Japanese resistance. On June 18, 1945, in Phnom Penh, while imprisoned by the Kempeitai, Groslier died under torture. He was later officially recognized as Mort pour la France ("Died in the service of France"). All Groslier's major work was inspired by his profound love and respect for the Cambodian people and their culture. Referring to his numerous talents, literary scholar Henri Copin has written: Through these disciplines of learning and art he roamed majestically, like that familiar Asiatic figure the elephant, all while exploring the past and absorbing the present of the country that witnessed his birth and, ultimately, his death. Drawing from this matchless wellspring of riches, he was able to convey, in writings both knowledgeable and sensitive, the ties and emotions that bound him to the land of the Khmer and its singular culture. In addition to his extensive body of scholarly writings on the art, archaeology and history of the Khmer people of Cambodia, Groslier's books include detailed travelogues as well as works of fiction – such as the novel Retour à l'Argile (Return to Clay (1928)), which won Le prix de littérature colonial (Grand Prize of Colonial Literature) in 1929 – describing his impressions of, and interactions with, Cambodians. Both institutions he founded, the National Museum of Cambodia and the Royal University of Fine Arts, are still in operation today.

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George Hedges

George Reynolds Hedges (February 26, 1952 – March 10, 2009) was a lawyer with a list of celebrity clients including Mel Gibson and David Lynch who gained attention in the field of archaeology for what at the time was thought to be the discovery of the ancient city of Ubar.

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George Henry Chase

George Henry Chase (June 13, 1874 – February 2, 1952) was a U.S. archaeologist and educator.

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George Henry Perkins

George Henry Perkins (25 September 1844, East Cambridge, Massachusetts - 12 September 1933) was an American naturalist.

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George Hourmouziadis

George Hourmouziadis (Γιώργος Χουρμουζιάδης; 26 November 1932 – 16 October 2013) was a Greek archaeologist and Professor Emeritus of prehistoric archaeology at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.

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George Julius Engelmann

George Julius Engelmann (July 2, 1847 – November 16, 1903) was an American obstetrician and gynecologist who was a native of St.Louis.

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George L. Kelm

George L. Kelm (born 1931) is Professor Emeritus of Archaeology and Biblical Backgrounds at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas, and while serving at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, he and Amihai Mazar uncovered Timnah.

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George Lloyd (archaeologist)

George Lloyd (1820 – 21 January 1885) was an English Anglican curate and archaeologist.

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George Macartney (British consul)

Sir George Macartney, KCIE, (19 January 1867 –19 May 1945), was the British consul-general in Kashgar at the end of the 19th century.

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George Macdonald (archaeologist)

Sir George Macdonald KCB Fellow of the British Academy FSA FEIS Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh DLit LLD (b. Elgin 30 January 1862; d. 9 August Edinburgh 1940) was an eminent archaeologist and numismatist who studied the Antonine Wall.

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George McJunkin

George McJunkin (1851–1922) was an African American cowboy, amateur archaeologist and historian in New Mexico.

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George Niemann

George Niemann (12 July 1841, Hanover – 19 February 1912, Vienna) was a German-Austrian architect and archaeologist.

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George Ormerod

George Ormerod (20 October 1785 – 9 October 1873) was an English antiquary and historian.

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George Palao

George L. Palao BEM (4 October 1940, Kensington, United Kingdom - 2009, Gibraltar) was a Gibraltarian historian and potholer and illustrator.

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George Petrie (artist)

George Petrie (1 January 1790 – 17 January 1866), was an Irish painter, musician, antiquary and archaeologist of the Victorian era.

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George R. Fischer

George Robert Fischer (May 4, 1937 - May 29, 2016) was an American underwater archaeologist, considered the founding father of the field in the National Park Service.

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George R. Milner

George R. Milner, Ph.D., is an archaeologist in the Department of Anthropology at The Pennsylvania State University.

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George Rolleston

George Rolleston MA MD FRCP FRS (30 July 1829 – 16 June 1881) was an English physician and zoologist.

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George Roussos

George Roussos (August 20, 1915 – February 19, 2000), also known under the pseudonym George Bell, was an American comic book artist best known as one of Jack Kirby's Silver Age inkers, including on landmark early issues of Marvel Comics' Fantastic Four.

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George Thomas Clark

Colonel George Thomas Clark (26 May 1809 – 31 January 1898) was a British surgeon and engineer.

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George White (preacher)

Rev.

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George Willmot

George Francis Willmot BA FSA (Born 1908) was a British archaeologist and curator based in York.

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George-Barthélemy Faribault

George-Barthélemy Faribault (December 3, 1789 – 1866) was a Canadian archaeologist, born in Quebec.

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Georges Chapouthier

Georges Chapouthier (born 27 March 1945 in Libourne) is a French neuroscientist and philosopher.

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Georges Charles Marius Engerrand

Georges Charles Marius Engerrand (11 August 1877, Libourne, France – 2 September 1961, Mexico City) was a French-Mexican-American geologist and archaeologist.

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Georges Dossin

Georges Gilles Joseph Dossin (4 February 1896, in Wandre, near Liège – 8 December 1983, in Liège) was a Belgian archaeologist, Assyriologist and art historian.

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Georges Foucart

Georges Foucart (11 December 1865, Paris – 1943) was a French historian and Egyptologist.

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Georges Goyau

Georges Goyau (31 March 1869 – 25 October 1939) was a French historian and essayist specializing in religious history.

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Georges Perrot

Georges Perrot (12 November 1832 – June 30, 1914) was a French archaeologist.

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Georgess McHargue

Georgess McHargue (June 7, 1941 – July 18, 2011) was an American writer and poet.

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Georgi Danevski

Georgi Danevski (born July 25, 1947) is a Canadian Macedonian painter, iconographer and muralist.

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Georgi Kitov

Georgi Kitov (Bulgarian: Георги Китов) (March 1, 1943 – September 14, 2008) was a Bulgarian archaeologist and thracologist.

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Georgina Herrmann

Georgina Herrmann, (born 20 October 1937) is a British retired archaeologist and academic, specialising in Near Eastern archaeology.

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Gerald A. Larue

Gerald Alexander Larue (June 20, 1916 in Calgary – September 17, 2014 in Newport Beach, California) was an American scholar of religion and professor emeritus of gerontology, a former ordained minister who became an agnostic, archaeologist, debunker of biblical stories and accounts of miracles, and humanist.

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Gerald Brodribb

Arthur Gerald Norcott Brodribb (21 May 1915 – 7 October 1999) was a cricket historian and archaeologist.

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Gerald Gallagher

Gerald Bernard Gallagher (6 July 1912 – 27 September 1941, Nikumaroro) is noted as the first officer-in-charge of the Phoenix Islands Settlement Scheme, the last colonial expansion of the British Empire.

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Gerald Gardner (Wiccan)

Gerald Brosseau Gardner (1884 – 1964), also known by the craft name Scire, was an English Wiccan, as well as an author and an amateur anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Gerald Lankester Harding

Gerald Lankester Harding (8 December 1901 – 11 February 1979) was a British archaeologist who was the Director of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan from 1936–1956.

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Gerald Livock

Group Captain Gerald Edward Livock (11 July 1897 – 27 January 1989) was an English officer of the Royal Naval Air Service and Royal Air Force, who served from the beginning the First World War until the end of Second, and was also an archaeologist and cricketer.

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Geraldine Finlayson

Geraldine Finlayson is Deputy Head of Heritage, as well as Director of the Institute for Gibraltarian Studies and Chief Laboratory Scientist of the Gibraltar Museum.

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Gerard Fowke

Gerard Fowke (June 25, 1855 – March 5, 1933) was an American archeologist and geologist best known for his studies of Native American mounds.

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Gerard McBurney

Gerard McBurney (born 20 June 1954) is a British composer, arranger, broadcaster, teacher and writer.

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Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff

Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff (March 6, 1912 – May 16, 1994) was an anthropologist and archaeologist known for his research and also in-depth fieldwork among many different Amerindian cultures such as in the Amazonian tropical rainforests (e.g. Desana Tucano), and also among dozens of other indigenous groups in Colombia in the Caribbean Coast (such as the Kogi of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta), as well as other living in the Pacific Coast, Llanos Orientales, and in the Andean and inter-Andean regions (Muisca) as well as in other areas of Colombia, and he also did research on campesino societies.

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Gerhard Bersu

Gerhard Bersu (26 September 1889 – 19 November 1964) was a German archaeologist who excavated widely across Europe.

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Gerhard Storz

Gerhard Storz (19 August 1898 - 30 August 1983) was the son of a Lutheran pastor from Württemberg who at various stages distinguished himself in theatre productions, as a scholar, an educationalist, a politician and an author-journalist, sometimes pursuing one career at a time and sometimes several in combination.

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German Archaeological Institute

The German Archaeological Institute (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, DAI) is an institution of research within the field of archaeology (and related fields), and a "scientific corporation", under the auspices of the federal Foreign Office of Germany.

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German Reformed Sanctity Church Parsonage

The German Reformed Sanctity Church Parsonage, also known as the First Reformed Church Parsonage, is located on Maple Avenue in Germantown, New York, United States.

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German wine

German wine is primarily produced in the west of Germany, along the river Rhine and its tributaries, with the oldest plantations going back to the Roman era.

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Germanic peoples

The Germanic peoples (also called Teutonic, Suebian, or Gothic in older literature) are an Indo-European ethno-linguistic group of Northern European origin.

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Germanic substrate hypothesis

The Germanic substrate hypothesis is an attempt to explain the distinctive nature of the Germanic languages within the context of the Indo-European languages.

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Gert Nygårdshaug

Gert Hermod Nygårdshaug (born 22 March 1946 at Tynset) is a Norwegian author.

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Gertrude Caton Thompson

Gertrude Caton Thompson, FBA (1 February 1888 – 18 April 1985) was an influential English archaeologist at a time when participation by women in the discipline was uncommon.

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Gertrude Eyifa-Dzidzienyo

Gertrude Eyifa-Dzidzienyo is the first Ghanaian woman to hold a PhD in archaeology.

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Gertrude Rachel Levy

Gertrude Rachel Levy (5 November 1883 – October 1966) was an author and cultural historian writing about comparative mythology, matriarchy, epic poetry and archaeology.

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Gerzeh culture

Gerzeh (also Girza or Jirzah) was a prehistoric Egyptian cemetery located along the west bank of the Nile.

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Gestad

Gestad is a parish in the Dalsland part of Vänersborg Municipality, Sweden, located about 20 km north of the city of Vänersborg and 10 km east of the village Brålanda.

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Gestingthorpe

Gestingthorpe (pronounced, 'guesstingthorpe') is a village and a civil parish in the Braintree District, in the English county of Essex.

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Getae

The Getae or or Gets (Γέται, singular Γέτης) were several Thracian tribes that once inhabited the regions to either side of the Lower Danube, in what is today northern Bulgaria and southern Romania.

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Getic burial complex

The Getic burial complex is an Archaeology site near Sveshatari in Bulgaria.

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Gettlinge

Gettlinge is a village in the southwest portion of the island of Öland, Sweden.

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Gezeitenwelt

Die Gezeitenwelt (The World of Tides) is the name of a series of German fantasy novels.

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Gheorghe Asachi

Gheorghe Asachi (surname also spelled Asaki; March 1, 1788 – November 12, 1869) was a Moldavian, later Romanian prose writer, poet, painter, historian, dramatist and translator.

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Gheorghe I. Cantacuzino

Gheorghe I. Cantacuzino (born 1937 in Bucharest) is a Romanian historian and archeologist.

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Ghorahi

Ghorahi (Nepali: घोराही उपमहानगरपालिका) is the seventh largest city and largest sub-metropolitan of Nepal.

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Ghost Blows Out the Light

Ghost Blows Out the Light, also referred to as Candle in the Tomb, is a fantasy novel series written by Zhang Muye (天下霸唱) about a team of grave robbers seeking hidden treasure, with the first book published online in March 2006.

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Ghulam Yazdani

Ghulam Yazdani, OBE (22 March 1885 – 13 November 1962) was an Indian archaeologist who was one of the founders of the Archaeological Department of His Exalted Highness The Nizam's Dominions (Hyderabad State).

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Giacomo Boni (archaeologist)

Giacomo Boni (25 April 1859 – 10 July 1925) was an Italian archaeologist specializing in Roman architecture.

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Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli

Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli (Milan 27 July 1822 - 6 April 1879) was an Italian count who gathered art from Italian Renaissance and left Italy one of the first private museum which bears his name, the Museo Poldi Pezzoli.

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Gianfranco Ravasi

Gianfranco Ravasi (born 18 October 1942) is an Italian prelate of the Catholic Church.

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Giants (esotericism)

In esoteric and occult teachings, giants are beings who live on spiritual, etheric and physical planes of existence.

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Giants' grave

. Giants' tomb (Italian: Tomba dei giganti, Sardinian: Tumba de zigantes / gigantis) is the name given by local people and archaeologists to a type of Sardinian megalithic gallery grave built during the Bronze Age by the Nuragic civilization.

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Giardino Botanico Preistorico di Molina di Ledro

The Giardino Botanico Preistorico di Molina di Ledro is a botanical garden on the grounds of the Museo delle Palafitte del Lago di Ledro, located in Val di Ledro near Lake Garda at Via Lungolago, 1, Molina di Ledro, Trentino, Italy.

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Gibraltar 2

Gibraltar 2, also known as Devil's Tower Child, represented five skull fragments of a female Neanderthal child discovered in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.

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Gideon Raff

Gideon "Gidi" Raff (גדעון "גידי" רף; born September 10, 1972) is an Israeli film and television director, screenwriter, and writer.

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Gil Stein (archaeologist)

Gil Stein (born January 9, 1956) is an American archaeologist.

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Gila Pueblo Archaeological Foundation

The Gila Pueblo Archaeological Foundation was founded in 1928 in Globe, Arizona by Harold S. Gladwin and Winifred (McCurdy) Gladwin.

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Gilbert Hunter Doble

Gilbert Hunter Doble (26 November 1880 – 15 April 1945) was an Anglican priest and Cornish historian and hagiographer.

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Gilbert Monckton, 2nd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley

Major-General Gilbert Walter Riversdale Monckton, 2nd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, (3 November 1915 – 22 June 2006) served in the British Army from 1939 to 1967.

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Gilcrease Museum

Gilcrease Museum is a museum located northwest of downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma.

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Gilding

Gilding is any decorative technique for applying fine gold leaf or powder to solid surfaces such as wood, stone, or metal to give a thin coating of gold.

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Gilsland

Gilsland is a village in northern England about west of Hexham, and about east of Carlisle, which straddles the border between Cumbria and Northumberland.

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Gimme a Break!

Gimme a Break! is an American sitcom that aired on NBC for six seasons from October 29, 1981 until May 12, 1987.

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Gino Vinicio Gentili

Gino Vinicio Gentili (Osimo, 27 September 1914 – Bologna, 29 July 2006) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Ginsweiler

Ginsweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Giorgio Buccellati

Giorgio Buccellati is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures and the Department of History at UCLA.

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Giovanni Battista Belzoni

Giovanni Battista Belzoni (5 November 1778 – 3 December 1823), sometimes known as The Great Belzoni, was a prolific Italian explorer and pioneer archaeologist of Egyptian antiquities.

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Giovanni Battista de Rossi

Giovanni Battista (Carlo) de Rossi (23 February 1822 – 20 September 1894) was an Italian archaeologist, famous even outside his field for rediscovering early Christian catacombs.

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Giovanni Battista Gallizioli

Giovanni Battista Gallizioli or Gallicciolli (17 May 1733 – 12 May 1806) was an Italian philosopher, hebraist, orientalist, historian, archaeologist and philologist, catholic priest and citizen of the Republic of Venice.

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Giovanni Becatti

Giovanni Becatti (1912–1973) was an Italian Classical art historian and archaeologist.

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Giovanni Bianchi

Giovanni Bianchi also known as Jano Planco (1693, Rimini – 1775), was an Italian anatomist, archaeologist, zoologist and intellectual.

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Giovanni Boccaccio

Giovanni Boccaccio (16 June 1313 – 21 December 1375) was an Italian writer, poet, correspondent of Petrarch, and an important Renaissance humanist.

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Giovanni Ciampini

Giovanni Giustino Ciampini (born Rome, 1633; died there 1698) was an ecclesiastical archaeologist.

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Giovanni Giocondo

Giovanni Giocondo, Order of Friars Minor, (c. 1433 – 1515) was an Italian friar, architect, antiquary, archaeologist, and classical scholar.

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Giovanni Gozzadini

Giovanni Gozzadini (15 October 1810 – 25 August 1887) was an Italian archeologist.

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Giovanni Inghirami

Giovanni Inghirami, Sch.P., (April 16, 1779 – August 15, 1851) was an Italian astronomer, as well as being a Catholic priest and Piarist.

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Giovanni Spano

Giovanni Spano (born Ploaghe, Sardinia, 3 March 1803; died Cagliari, Sardinia, 3 April 1878), also a priest and a linguist, is considered one of the first archaeologists to study the Mediterranean island of Sardinia.

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Gircha

Gircha (Girča wakhi, گرچہ Urdu) is a village in the Gojal Tehsil of Hunza in the Gilgit Baltistan region of Pakistan.

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Giresun Museum

Giresun Museum is a museum in Giresun, Turkey The museum is in Zeytinlik neighborhood of Giresun at.

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Girolamo Maggi

Girolamo Maggi (1523, in Anghiari – 27 March 1572 in Constantinople), also known by his Latin name Hieronymus Magius, was an Italian scholar, jurist, poet, military engineer, urban planner, philologist, archaeologist, mathematician, and naturalist who studied at Bologna under Francis Robortello.

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GIS in archaeology

GIS or Geographic Information Systems has been an important tool in archaeology since the early 1990s.

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Giuseppe Caspar Mezzofanti

Giuseppe Caspar Mezzofanti (19 September 1774 – 15 March 1849) was an Italian cardinal and famed hyperpolyglot.

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Giuseppe Ferretto

Giuseppe Antonio Ferretto (9 March 1899 – 17 March 1973) was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Major Penitentiary in the Roman Curia from 1967 to 1973, and was elevated to the rank of cardinal in 1961.

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Giuseppe Fiorelli

Giuseppe Fiorelli (8 June 1823 – 28 January 1896) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Giuseppe Ricciotti

Abbot Giuseppe Ricciotti, C.R.L., (Rome, 1890 – 1964) was an Italian canon regular, Biblical scholar and archeologist.

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Givi Maisuradze

Givi Maisuradze is a Georgian geologist, Professor, Dr.Sc.

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Gla

Gla (rarely Glas; Γλα or Γλας) was an important fortified site of the Mycenaean civilization, located in Boeotia, mainland Greece.

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Glamorgan

Glamorgan, or sometimes Glamorganshire, (Morgannwg or Sir Forgannwg) is one of the thirteen historic counties of Wales and a former administrative county of Wales.

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Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust

The Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust is an Archaeological Trust organisation established in 1975 as part of the Welsh Archaeological Trusts.

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Glan-Münchweiler

Glan-Münchweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Glauberg

The Glauberg is a Celtic oppidum in Hesse, Germany consisting of a fortified settlement and several burial mounds, "a princely seat of the late Hallstatt and early La Tène periods." Archaeological discoveries in the 1990s place the site among the most important early Celtic centres in Europe.

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Glenn Albert Black

Glenn Albert Black was an influential archaeologist of the United States who was among the first professionals to study Indiana prehistoric sites.

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Glevum

Glevum (or, more formally, Colonia Nervia Glevensium, or occasionally Glouvia) was a Roman fort in Roman Britain that became a "colonia" of retired legionaries in AD 97.

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Glossary of archaeology

This page is a glossary of archaeology, the study of the human past from material remains.

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Glossary of dyeing terms

Dyeing is the craft of imparting colors to textiles in loose fiber, yarn, cloth or garment form by treatment with a dye.

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Glossary of history

This glossary of history is a list of topics relating to history.

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Gloucester County, Virginia

Gloucester County is a county in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

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Glycymeris (shells)

The shells of large saltwater bittersweet clams in the genus Glycymeris have a special archaeological significance in the southwestern USA, because the shells were used in trade item production by the Hohokam tribe of Amerindians.

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Glyn Daniel

Glyn Edmund Daniel (23 April 1914 – 13 December 1986) was a Welsh scientist and archaeologist who taught at Cambridge University, where he specialised in the European Neolithic period.

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Glynn Isaac

Glynn Llywelyn Isaac (19 November 1937 – 5 October 1985) was a South African archaeologist who specialised in the very early prehistory of Africa, and was one of twin sons born to botanists William Edwyn Isaac and Frances Margaret Leighton.

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Glyptology

Glyptology is the study of engraved gems, or of engravings on gems.

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Gnaeus Julius Agricola

Gnaeus Julius Agricola (13 June 40 – 23 August 93) was a Gallo-Roman general responsible for much of the Roman conquest of Britain.

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GNSS applications

Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receivers, using the GPS, GLONASS, Galileo or BeiDou system, are used in many applications.

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Go (game)

Go is an abstract strategy board game for two players, in which the aim is to surround more territory than the opponent.

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Goat Rock Beach

Goat Rock Beach is a sand beach in northwestern Sonoma County, California, United States.

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Gobannium

Gobannium was a Roman fort and civil settlement or Castra established by the Roman legions invading what was to become Roman Wales and lies today under the market town of Abergavenny, Monmouthshire in south east Wales.

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Godalming Hundred

Godalming was an ancient hundred in the south west of the county of Surrey, England.

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Godavaya

Godavaya or Godawaya is a small fishing hamlet located at the mouth of the Walawe river, between Ambalantota and Hambantota in the Hambantota District in southern Sri Lanka.

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Godefroy Zumoffen

Reverend Father Godefroy Zumoffen (1848 in France – 1928) was a French Jesuit archaeologist and geologist notable for his work on prehistory in Lebanon.

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Godič

Godič (GoditschLeksikon občin kraljestev in dežel zastopanih v državnem zboru, vol. 6: Kranjsko. 1906. Vienna: C. Kr. Dvorna in Državna Tiskarna, p. 26.) is a village on the left bank of the Kamnik Bistrica River in the Municipality of Kamnik in the Upper Carniola region of Slovenia.

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Gods, Graves and Scholars

Gods, Graves, and Scholars is a book by German writer C. W. Ceram about the history of archaeology.

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Godzilla: The Series

Godzilla: The Series is an American-Japanese animated television series which originally aired on Fox Kids in the United States.

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Goff's Caye

Goff's Caye is a small island off the shore of Belize City, Belize.

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Gog Magog Hills

The Gog Magog Hills are a range of low chalk hills, extending for several miles to the southeast of Cambridge in England.

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Gogo Falls

Gogo Falls is an archaeological site near a former and since 1956 dammed waterfall, located in the Lake Victoria Basin in Migori County, western Kenya.

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Gojal

Gojal, also known as Upper Hunza, is a valley situated in the far north of Pakistan.

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Gold Museum, Bogotá

The Museum of Gold (El Museo del Oro) is a museum located in Bogotá, Colombia.

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Gold working in the Bronze Age British Isles

Gold working in the Bronze Age British Isles refers to the use of gold to produce ornaments and other prestige items in the British Isles during the Bronze Age, between circa 2500 and c.800 BCE in Britain, and up to about 550 BCE in Ireland.

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Golden age (metaphor)

A golden age is a period in a field of endeavor when great tasks were accomplished.

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Golden Cone of Ezelsdorf-Buch

The Golden Cone of Ezelsdorf-Buch (Goldblechkegel von Ezelsdorf Buch) is a Late Bronze Age artefact discovered in 1953 between the villages of Ezelsdorf (Middle Franconia) and Buch (Upper Palatinate) in Southern Germany.

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Golden hat

Golden hats (or Gold hats) (Goldhüte, singular: Goldhut) are a very specific and rare type of archaeological artifact from Bronze Age Europe.

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Golden Hills (Russia)

Golden Hills (in Russian, Zolotiye Gorki) is an archaeological site in southern Russia.

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Golden Salamander (film)

Golden Salamander is a 1950 adventure film directed by Ronald Neame and starring Trevor Howard as an archaeologist in North Africa who runs afoul of a crime sydicate.

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Golgotha (video game)

Golgotha was a video game that was being developed by Crack dot Com prior to shutting down in 1998.

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Golra Sharif Railway Museum

Golra Sharif Railway Museum, also known as Pakistan Railways Heritage Museum, is a railway museum located near the Sector E-11 of Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan.

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Golubac

Golubac (Голубац) is a village and municipality located in the Braničevo District of the eastern Serbia.

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Gonzalo Correal Urrego

Gonzalo Correal Urrego (Gachalá, Colombia, 23 October 1939) is a Colombian anthropologist, palaeontologist and archaeologist.

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Gonzalo Figueroa Garcia Huidobro

Gonzalo Figueroa Garcia Huidobro (February 4, 1931, Santiago, Chile - May 20, 2008, Santiago, Chile), often referred to simply as Gonzalo Figueroa, was an archaeologist and authority on the conservation of the archaeological heritage of Rapa Nui (Easter Island).

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Goranchacha Temple

The Goranchacha Temple (Spanish: Templo de Goranchacha) is an archeological site of the Muisca located in the city of Tunja, Boyacá, which in the time of the Muisca Confederation was called Hunza.

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Gordion Museum

Gordion Museum is a museum in Turkey.

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Gordium

Gordium (Γόρδιον, Górdion; Gordion or Gordiyon) was the capital city of ancient Phrygia.

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Gordon Willey

Gordon Randolph Willey (7 March 1913 – 28 April 2002) was an American archaeologist who was described by colleagues as the "dean" of New World archaeology.

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Gorham's Cave

Gorham's Cave is a natural sea cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar.

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Gorm the Old

Gorm the Old (Gorm den Gamle, Gormr gamli, Gormus Senex), also called Gorm the Languid (Gorm Løge, Gorm den Dvaske), was the first historically recognized ruler of Denmark, reigning from to his death.

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Gortclohy, County Kerry

Gortclohy (Gort Cloiche) is a townland of County Kerry, Ireland.

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Gortyn

Gortyn, Gortys or Gortyna (Γόρτυν, Γόρτυς, or Γόρτυνα) is a municipality and an archaeological site on the Mediterranean island of Crete, 45 km away from the modern capital Heraklion.

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Gottfried Semper

Gottfried Semper (29 November 1803 – 15 May 1879) was a German architect, art critic, and professor of architecture, who designed and built the Semper Opera House in Dresden between 1838 and 1841.

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Gottlieb Schumacher

Gottlieb Schumacher (21 November 1857 – 26 November 1925) was an American-born civil engineer, architect and archaeologist of German descent, who was an important figure in the early archaeological exploration of Palestine.

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Gourmet Museum and Library

The Gourmet Museum and Library (Bibliothèque et musée de la Gourmandise) is a museum dedicated to the history of gastronomy, located in Hermalle-sous-Huy, province of Liège, Belgium.

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Gouverneur Morris Jr.

Gouverneur Morris II (February 9, 1813 – August 20, 1888) was an American railroad executive and the son of a founding father of the United States, Gouverneur Morris.

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Govan

Govan (Scottish Gaelic: Baile a' Ghobhainn) is a district, parish, and former burgh now part of south-west City of Glasgow, Scotland.

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Government Museum, Chennai

The Government Museum or Madras Museum is a museum of human history and culture located in the neighbourhood of Egmore in Chennai, India.

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Government Post Graduate College (Swabi)

Government Post Graduate College, Swabi is a public sector Postgraduate college in the Swabi District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan.

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Government Superior Science College Peshawar

Government Superior Science College Peshawar is a public sector college located in Wazir Bagh Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.

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Gower (magazine)

Gower: Journal of the Gower Society is an English-language annual magazine containing articles, photographs, and news relating to the archaeology, history, natural history, and landscape of the Gower Peninsula.

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Grace Dieu (ship)

Grace Dieu was the flagship of King Henry V of England and one of the largest ships of her time.

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Graduate Group in the Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World

The Graduate Group in the Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World (AAMW) is an interdisciplinary program for research and teaching of archaeology, particularly archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean (Greece and Rome), Egypt, Anatolia, and the Near East, based in the Penn Museum of the University of Pennsylvania.

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Graduate school

A graduate school (sometimes shortened as grad school) is a school that awards advanced academic degrees (i.e. master's and doctoral degrees) with the general requirement that students must have earned a previous undergraduate (bachelor's) degree with a high grade point average.

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Graeme Barker

Graeme William Walter Barker, CBE, FBA (born 23 October 1946) is a British archaeologist, notable for his work on the Italian Bronze Age, the Roman occupation of Libya, and landscape archaeology.

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Graeme Davis (game designer)

Graeme Davis (born 1958, in Isleworth, England) is a writer and editor.

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Graffiti

Graffiti (plural of graffito: "a graffito", but "these graffiti") are writing or drawings that have been scribbled, scratched, or painted, typically illicitly, on a wall or other surface, often within public view.

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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 Cave

Graham Cave is a Native American archeological site near Mineola, Missouri in Montgomery County in the hills above the Loutre River.

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Graham Cave State Park

Graham Cave State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Missouri consisting of located in Montgomery County.

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Graham Creek

Graham Creek is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Graham Fraser

Graham Fraser (born 1946 in Ottawa, Ontario) is Canada's sixth Commissioner of Official Languages, and a former Canadian journalist and writer.

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Graham Webster (archaeologist)

Graham Alexander Webster OBE (31 May 1913 – 21 May 2001) was a British archaeologist, one of the pre-eminent figures of Roman-British archaeology in the late 20th Century.

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Grahame Clark

Sir John Grahame Douglas Clark, CBE, FBA (28 July 1907 – 12 September 1995), who often published as J. G. D. Clark, was a British archaeologist who specialised in the study of Mesolithic Europe and palaeoeconomics.

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Grakliani Hill

Grakliani Hill (გრაკლიანი გორა, Grakliani Gora) is an archaeological excavation site in eastern Georgia near Kaspi, showing evidence of human presence possibly going back 300,000 years.

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Gran Coclé

Gran Coclé is an archaeological culture area of the so-called Intermediate Area in pre-Columbian Central America.

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Grand Banks of Newfoundland

The Grand Banks of Newfoundland are a group of underwater plateaus south-east of Newfoundland on the North American continental shelf.

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Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich of Russia

Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich of Russia (Сергей Александрович; May 11, 1857 – February 17, 1905) was the fifth son and seventh child of Emperor Alexander II of Russia.

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Grand Portage National Monument

Grand Portage National Monument is a United States National Monument located on the north shore of Lake Superior in northeastern Minnesota that preserves a vital center of fur trade activity and Anishinaabeg Ojibwe heritage.

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Grand Site

The Grand Site is an archaeological site in Jacksonville, Florida, United States.

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Grand Traverse Bay

Grand Traverse Bay is a bay of Lake Michigan formed by the Leelanau Peninsula in the northwestern Lower Peninsula of Michigan.

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Grand Village of the Illinois

The Grand Village of the Illinois, also called Old Kaskaskia Village, is a site significant for being the best documented historic Native American village in the Illinois River valley.

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Grand Village of the Natchez

Grand Village of the Natchez, (22 AD 501) also known as the Fatherland Site, is a site encompassing a prehistoric indigenous village and earthwork mounds in present-day south Natchez, Mississippi.

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Grande Ronde River

The Grande Ronde River (or, less commonly) is a tributary of the Snake River, long,U.S. Geological Survey.

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Grandes écoles

The Grandes Écoles (literally in French "Great Schools") of France are higher education establishments that are outside the main framework of the French public university system.

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Granollers Museum

The Granollers Museum (Granollers, Vallès Oriental) is a heterogeneous collection comprising archaeology, decorative arts, ethnography, numismatics and ancient, modern and contemporary art.

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Grauballe Man

The Grauballe Man is a bog body that was uncovered in 1952 from a peat bog near the village of Grauballe in Jutland, Denmark.

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Grave

A grave is a location where a dead body (typically that of a human, although sometimes that of an animal) is buried.

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Grave goods

Grave goods, in archaeology and anthropology, are the items buried along with the body.

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Grave robbery

Grave robbery, tomb robbing, or tomb raiding is the act of uncovering a grave, tomb or crypt to steal matter.

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Graveney School

Graveney School is a secondary school and sixth form with academy status in the Furzedown area of Tooting, southwest London, England.

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Grünstadt

Grünstadt is a town in the Bad Dürkheim district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany with roughly 13,200 inhabitants.

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Greasby

Greasby is a large village on the Wirral Peninsula, Merseyside, England.

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Greaser Petroglyph Site

The Greaser Petroglyph Site is located on land managed by the Bureau of Land Management in eastern Lake County, Oregon.

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Great Basin

The Great Basin is the largest area of contiguous endorheic watersheds in North America.

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Great Britain commemorative stamps 1980–89

Commemorative stamps, which are postage stamps issued to honor or commemorate a place, event or person, have been released by Great Britain since 1924.

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Great Horkesley

Great Horkesley is a village approximately 3 miles north of Colchester in the county of Essex, UK, and is part of the borough of Colchester.

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Great Langdale

Great Langdale is a valley in the Lake District National Park in North West England, the epithet Great distinguishing it from the neighbouring valley of Little Langdale.

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Great Mosque of Kairouan

The Great Mosque of Kairouan (جامع القيروان الأكبر), also known as the Mosque of Uqba (جامع عقبة بن نافع), is a mosque in Tunisia, situated in the UNESCO World Heritage town of Kairouan.

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Great Neck Point

Great Neck Point is a point of land and neighborhood in Virginia Beach, Virginia on the Lynnhaven River.

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Great Peacemaker

The Great Peacemaker (Skennenrahawi in Mohawk), sometimes referred to as Deganawida or Dekanawida (as a mark of respect, some Iroquois avoid using his personal name except in special circumstances) was by tradition, along with Jigonhsasee and Hiawatha, the founder of the Haudenosaunee, commonly called the Iroquois Confederacy.

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Great Plains Art Museum

The Great Plains Art Museum is a fine arts museum located in Lincoln, Nebraska that is dedicated to the arts of the Great Plains in the United States.

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Great Pyramid of Cholula

The Great Pyramid of Cholula, also known as Tlachihualtepetl (Nahuatl for "made-by-hand mountain"), is a huge complex located in Cholula, Puebla, Mexico.

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Great Sphinx of Giza

The Great Sphinx of Giza (translit,, The Terrifying One; literally: Father of Dread), commonly referred to as the Sphinx of Giza or just the Sphinx, is a limestone statue of a reclining sphinx, a mythical creature with the body of a lion and the head of a human.

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Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917

The fire as seen from the quay in 1917. The fire as seen from the Thermaic Gulf. The Great Thessaloniki Fire of 1917 (Μεγάλη Πυρκαγιά της Θεσσαλονίκης, 1917) destroyed two thirds of the city of Thessaloniki, the second-largest city in Greece, leaving more than 70,000 homeless.

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Great Western Railway

The Great Western Railway (GWR) was a British railway company that linked London with the south-west and west of England, the Midlands, and most of Wales.

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Great Zimbabwe

Great Zimbabwe is a medieval city in the south-eastern hills of Zimbabwe near Lake Mutirikwe and the town of Masvingo.

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Grebo people

Grebo people (or Glebo) is a term used to refer to an ethnic group or subgroup within the larger Kru group of Africa, a language and cultural ethnicity, and to certain of its constituent elements.

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Greek Homosexuality (book)

Greek Homosexuality (1978; second edition 1989; third edition 2016) is a book about homosexuality in ancient Greece by the classical scholar Kenneth Dover, in which the author uses archaic and classical archaeological and literary sources to discuss ancient Greek sexual behavior and attitudes.

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Greek mythology

Greek mythology is the body of myths and teachings that belong to the ancient Greeks, concerning their gods and heroes, the nature of the world, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices.

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Green Mound

Green Mound is one of the largest Pre-Columbian shell mounds, or shell middens, in the United States.

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Green River (Colorado River tributary)

The Green River, located in the western United States, is the chief tributary of the Colorado River.

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Green Spring Plantation

Green Spring Plantation in James City County about five miles (8 km) west of Williamsburg, was the 17th century plantation of one of the more popular governors of Colonial Virginia in North America, Sir William Berkeley, and his wife, Frances Culpeper Berkeley.

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Greene County, Illinois

Greene County is a county located in the U.S. state of Illinois.

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Greensted Church

Greensted Church, in the small village of Greensted-juxta-Ongar, near Chipping Ongar in Essex, England, is the oldest wooden church in the world, and probably the oldest wooden building in Europe still standing, albeit only in part, since few sections of its original wooden structure remain.

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Greenstone (archaeology)

Greenstone is a common generic term for valuable, green-hued minerals and metamorphosed igneous rocks and stones which early cultures used in the fashioning of hardstone carvings such as jewelry, statuettes, ritual tools, and various other artifacts.

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Greenwood Furnace State Park

Greenwood Furnace State Park is a Pennsylvania state park in Jackson Township, Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Greg Woolf

Gregory "Greg" Woolf, is a British ancient historian, archaeologist, and academic.

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Gregory House

Gregory House, M.D., commonly referred to simply as House, is the title character of the American medical drama series House.

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Gregory Perino

Greg Perino was a self-taught professional archaeologist, author, consultant, and the last living founder of the Illinois State Archaeological Society.

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Grenzach-Wyhlen

Grenzach-Wyhlen is a municipality in the district of Lörrach in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

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Greta Arwidsson

Greta Arwidsson (5 July 1906 – 31 January 1998) was a Swedish archaeologist.

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Grey literature

Grey literature (or gray literature) are materials and research produced by organizations outside of the traditional commercial or academic publishing and distribution channels.

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Grey Literature Network Service

GreyNet International, the Grey Literature Network Service is an independent organization founded in 1992, which is dedicated to research, publication, open access, education, and public awareness to grey literature.

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Grga Novak

Grga Novak (2April 18887September 1978) was a distinguished Croatian historian, archaeologist and geographer, and President of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts from 1958 to 1978.

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Gribshunden

Gribshunden or Griffen (English: "Griffin-Hound" or "Griffin"), also known by several variant names including Gribshund, Gripshunden, Gripshund, Griff, and Griffone, was a Danish warship, the flagship of John, King of Denmark (r. 1481–1513).

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Griddharaj Parvat

Griddharaj Parvat (Hindi: गृद्घराज पर्वत which means "the hill of vultures"; also called Griddhakut Parvat, known locally as Giddhaila Pahar, and known in English as Vulture Peak) is a hill of religious, archeological and ecological importance.

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Gries, Germany

Gries is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Griffiths Island

Griffiths Island, sometimes incorrectly spelled as Griffith Island, lies at the mouth of the Moyne River next to, and within the bounds of, the town of Port Fairy, in the Western District of the state of Victoria in Australia.

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Griffon Ramsey

Griffon E. Ramsey (born April 23, 1980) is an American chainsaw carving artist known for her pop-culture wood sculptures which have appeared at the Australian Chainsaw Carving Championships and the Butler Chainsaw Carving Invitational.

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Grigore Moisil

Grigore Constantin Moisil (10 January 1906 – 21 May 1973) was a Romanian mathematician, computer pioneer, and member of the Romanian Academy.

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Grigore Tocilescu

Grigore George Tocilescu (26 October 1850 – 18 September 1909) was a Romanian historian, archaeologist, epigrapher and folkorist, member of Romanian Academy.

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Grimaldi Man

Grimaldi man is the name formerly given to two human skeletons of the Upper Paleolithic discovered in Italy in 1901.

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Grimoire

A grimoire is a textbook of magic, typically including instructions on how to create magical objects like talismans and amulets, how to perform magical spells, charms and divination, and how to summon or invoke supernatural entities such as angels, spirits, and demons.

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Grimsby

Grimsby, also known as Great Grimsby, is a large coastal English town and seaport in North East Lincolnshire, of which it is the administrative centre.

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Grinding slab

Stone slab in east-central California used to grind acorns In archaeology, a grinding slab is a ground stone artifact generally used to grind plant materials into usable size, though some slabs were used to shape other ground stone artifacts.

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Gritulu

Gritulu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Gro Steinsland

Gro Steinsland (born 1945) is a Norwegian scholar of medieval studies and history of religion and since August 2009 has been the Scientific Director of the Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.

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Groans of the Britons

The Groans of the Britons (gemitus Britannorum) is the name of the final appeal made by the Britons to the Roman military for assistance against Pict and Scot raiders.

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Großostheim

Großostheim (or Grossostheim) is a market community in the Aschaffenburg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany.

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Grodzisko Górne

Grodzisko Górne is a farming village in the administrative district of Gmina Grodzisko Dolne, within Leżajsk County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland.

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Grooved ware

Grooved ware is the name given to a pottery style of the British Neolithic.

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Gropecunt Lane

Gropecunt Lane was a street name found in English towns and cities during the Middle Ages, believed to be a reference to the prostitution centred on those areas; it was normal practice for a medieval street name to reflect the street's function or the economic activity taking place within it.

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Grosvenor Museum

Grosvenor Museum is a museum in Chester, Cheshire, England.

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Ground stone

In archaeology, ground stone is a category of stone tool formed by the grinding of a coarse-grained tool stone, either purposely or incidentally.

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Grove, Virginia

Grove is an unincorporated community in the southeastern portion of James City County in the Peninsula subregion of Virginia in the United States.

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Growlanser II: The Sense of Justice

Growlanser II: The Sense of Justice is the second game of the Growlanser series developed by Career Soft.

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Grumbach

Grumbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Guaíba

Guaíba is a city located in the Metropolitan Porto Alegre of Porto Alegre, in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul.

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Gualberto Piangatelli

Gualberto Piangatelli (1921–2001) was a historian and archeologist in San Severino Marche.

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Guale

Guale was a historic Native American chiefdom of Mississippian culture peoples located along the coast of present-day Georgia and the Sea Islands.

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Guana Island

Guana Island is an island of the British Virgin Islands (BVI) in the Caribbean.

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Guðrún Katrín Þorbergsdóttir

Guðrún Katrín Þorbergsdóttir (pronounced; 14 August 1934 – 12 October 1998) was the First Lady of Iceland from 1996 to 1998.

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Guboo Ted Thomas

Edwin "Guboo" Ted Thomas (29 January 1909 – 19 May 2002) of the Yuin people was a prominent Aboriginal (Koori) elder (leader), He lived a full life, including touring Australia with a gumleaf orchestra during the Great Depression of the 1930s, playing rugby league and getting banned for fighting a referee, yet growing to become an Elder campaigning for protection of sacred sites on the South Coast, who went to the United Nations in New York, who urged the World Council of Churches to accept indigenous religions, and who met the Dalai Lama.

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Gudmund Hatt

Professor Aage Gudmund Hatt (1 October 1884 - 27 January 1960) was a Danish archaeologist and cultural geographer.

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Gudrun Corvinus

Gudrun Corvinus (1932–2006) was a German geologist, paleontologist and archaeologist.

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Guglielmo Libri Carucci dalla Sommaja

Guglielmo Libri Carucci dalla Sommaja (January 1, 1803 – September 28, 1869) was an Italian count and mathematician, who became known for his love and subsequent theft of ancient and precious manuscripts.

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Guiding Light (1980–89)

The Guiding Light (GL) is the longest-running American television soap opera.

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Guido Calza

Guido Calza (April 21, 1888 – April 17, 1946 in Rome, Italy), born in Milan, Italy, was an Italian archaeologist whose work included excavations in Rome and at the port city of Ostia.

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Guido Kaschnitz von Weinberg

Guido Kaschnitz von Weinberg (28 June 1890 in Vienna – 1 September 1958 in Frankfurt am Main) was an Austrian-German archaeologist and art historian.

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Guido Lanfranco

Guido Lanfranco (born Sliema, 18 October 1930) is a Maltese writer on natural history and folklore.

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Guildford

Guildford is a large town in Surrey, England, United Kingdom located southwest of central London on the A3 trunk road midway between the capital and Portsmouth.

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Guillaume de Jerphanion

Guillaume de Jerphanion, born at Pontevès in 1877, died in Rome on 22 October 1948, was a French Jesuit, epigrapher, geographer, photographer, linguist, archaeologist and Byzantinist.

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Guillemette Andreu

Guillemette Andreu-Lanoë (born August 3, 1948 in Paris), is a French Egyptologist and archaeologist.

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Gungywamp

Gungywamp is an archaeological site in Groton, Connecticut, United States, consisting of artifacts dating from 2000-770 BC, a stone circle, and the remains of both Native American and colonial structures.

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Gunnerus Library

The Gunnerus Library in Trondheim is the oldest scientific library in Norway and dates back to 1768 when it was the library of the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters (DKNVS).

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Gunpowder artillery in the Song dynasty

Gunpowder artillery in the Song dynasty included the 'multiple bullets magazine erupters' ('bai zu lian zhu pao' 百子連珠炮), consisting of a tube of bronze or cast iron that was filled with about 100 lead balls,Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 263-364.

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Gunter Schöbel

Gunter Schöbel (born 15 July 1959 in Stuttgart) is a German archaeologist and director of the Pfahlbau Museum Unteruhldingen.

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Guo Moruo

Guo Moruo (November 16, 1892 – June 12, 1978), courtesy name Dingtang (鼎堂), was a Chinese author, poet, historian, archaeologist, and government official from Sichuan, China.

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Guram Dochanashvili

Guram Dochanashvili (გურამ დოჩანაშვილი) (born 26 March 1939) is a Georgian prose writer, a historian by profession, who has been popular for his short stories since the 1970s.

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Gurney family (Norwich)

The Gurneys were an influential family of English Quakers who had a major influence on the development of Norwich.

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Gurteen Beach

Gurteen Beach (Trá na Feadóige in Irish meaning beach of the plover), located in Roundstone, County Galway, in the Connemara region of the west of Ireland, lies back-to-back with Dog's Bay.

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Guruh Sukarnoputra

Muhammad Guruh Irianto Sukarnoputra (born 13 January 1953) is a member of Indonesia's People's Representative Council and an artist.

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Gustaf Hallström

Gustaf Axel Hallström (July 11, 1880 - October 5, 1962) was a Swedish archaeologist and photographer.

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Gustaf Kossinna

Gustaf Kossinna (28 September 1858 – 20 December 1931) was a German linguist and professor of German archaeology at the University of Berlin.

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Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden

Gustaf VI Adolf (Oscar Fredrik Wilhelm Olaf Gustaf Adolf; 11 November 1882 – 15 September 1973) was King of Sweden from 29 October 1950 until his death.

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Gustav Adolf Michaelis

Gustav Adolf Michaelis (9 July 1798 – 8 August 1848) was a German obstetrician who was a native of Kiel.

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Gustav Brühl (author)

Gustav Brühl (born 31 May 1826 in Herdorf, Prussia; died 16 February 1903 in Cincinnati) was an American physician, poet and archaeologist.

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Gustav Fritsch

Gustav Theodor Fritsch (5 March 1838 – 12 June 1927) was a German anatomist, anthropologist, traveller and physiologist from Cottbus.

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Gustav Körte

Gustav Körte (8 February 1852 in Berlin – 15 August 1917 in Göttingen) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Gustav Seyffarth

Gustav Seyffarth (13 July 179617 November 1885) was a German-American Egyptologist, born in Uebigau.

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Gustav von Rohden

Gustav von Rohden (22 April 1855, Barmen – 9 May 1942, Ballenstedt) was a German clergyman and the author of books on various social issues (the welfare of former prisoners, sexual ethics, etc.). From 1882 he served as a pastor in Helsingfors, Finland.

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Gustave Fougères

Gustave Fougères (24 April 1863, Baume-les-Dames (Doubs) – 7 December 1927, Paris, aged 64) was a French archaeologist, spécialist of archaic Greece.

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Gustave Jéquier

Gustave Jéquier (14 August 1868 – 24 March 1946) was born in and died in Neuchâtel, Switzerland.

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Gutenberg, Germany

Gutenberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Guy Brunton

Guy Brunton OBE (1878 in London, England – 17 October 1948 in White River, Mpumalanga, South Africa) was an English archaeologist and Egyptologist who discovered the Badarian predynastic culture.

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Guy Christian Collet

Guy Christian Collet (1929 – 29 October 2004) was a French scientist, explorer and spelunker who came to live in Brazil after the World War II.

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Guy de la Bédoyère

Guy Martyn Thorold Huchet de la Bédoyère (born November 1957) is a British historian, who has published widely on Roman Britain and other subjects; and has appeared regularly on the Channel 4 archaeological television series Time Team, starting in 1998.

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Guy Halsall

Guy Halsall (born 1964) is an English historian of Early Medieval Europe.

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Guzel Maitdinova

Dr.Guzel Maitdinova (Maytdinova) (born on 5.09.1952) is a Eurasian geopolitician, ethnologist, historian and archeologist based in Tajikistan.

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Gweagal

The Gweagal (also spelt Gwiyagal) are a clan of the Tharawal (or Dharawal) tribe of Indigenous Australians, who are traditional custodians of the southern geographic areas of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Gwynedd Archaeological Trust

The Gwynedd Archaeological Trust is an Archaeological Trust organisation established in 1974 as part of the Welsh Archaeological Trusts.

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Gydan Peninsula

The Gydan Peninsula (Гыда́нский полуостров) is a geographical feature of the Siberian coast in the Kara Sea.

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Gyula László

Gyula László (Kőhalom, 14 March 1910 – Nagyvárad (today: Oradea) 17 July 1998) was a Hungarian historian, archaeologist and artist.

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H. Chalton Bradshaw

Harold Chalton Bradshaw CBE M.Arch FRIBA (15 February 1893 – 15 October 1943), 23 October 2007, accessed 28 December 2007 was a Liverpool-born architect, recipient of the first Rome scholarship in Architecture (1913) & first Secretary of The Royal Fine Art Commission.

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H. Krishna Sastri

Rao Bahadur Hosakote Krishna Sastri (16 September 1870 – 8 February 1928) was an Indian epigraphist with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).

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H. P. Lovecraft

Howard Phillips Lovecraft (August 20, 1890 – March 15, 1937) was an American writer who achieved posthumous fame through his influential works of horror fiction.

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Haakon Shetelig

Haakon Shetelig (June 25, 1877 – July 22, 1955) was a Norwegian archaeologist, historian and museum director.

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Habbo Gerhard Lolling

Habbo Gerhard Lolling (23 November 1848, Tergast near Emden – 22 February 1894, Athens) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Hackers (film)

Hackers is a 1995 American crime film directed by Iain Softley and starring Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie, Renoly Santiago, Laurence Mason, Matthew Lillard, Jesse Bradford, Lorraine Bracco, and Fisher Stevens.

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Hadaftimo

Hadaftimo (Hadaaftimo) is an historic town in the northern Sanaag region of Somalia.

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Hadrian's Villa

Hadrian's Villa (Villa Adriana in Italian) is a large Roman archaeological complex at Tivoli, Italy.

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Haga dolmen

The Haga dolmen (Hagadösen) is a megalithic dolmen, dating from the Neolithic era.

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Haganai

, short for, is a Japanese light novel series written by Yomi Hirasaka, illustrated by Buriki, and published by Media Factory.

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Hagarism

Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World is a 1977 book about the early history of Islam by the historians Patricia Crone and Michael Cook.

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Hagia Triada

Hagia Triada (also Ayia Triada, Agia Triada, Agia Trias, — Holy Trinity) is the archaeological site of an ancient Minoan settlement.

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Hagios Demetrios

The Church of Saint Demetrius, or Hagios Demetrios (Άγιος Δημήτριος), is the main sanctuary dedicated to Saint Demetrius, the patron saint of Thessaloniki (in Central Macedonia, Greece), dating from a time when it was the second largest city of the Byzantine Empire.

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Hahnenkamm (Altmühl valley)

The Hahnenkamm is a mountain ridge in Bavaria (Germany), belonging to the Franconian Jura.

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Haibach, Lower Franconia

Haibach is a community in the Aschaffenburg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany.

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Haida argillite carvings

Haida argillite carvings are a sculptural tradition among the Haida indigenous nation of the Northwest Coast of North America.

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Hajdúdorog

Hajdúdorog is a town in Hajdú-Bihar county, in the Northern Great Plain region of eastern Hungary.

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Haleki'i-Pihana Heiau State Monument

Halekii-Pihana Heiau State Monument is a park containing two important luakini heiau on a high ridge near the mouth of okinaIao Stream in Wailuku, Maui.

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Halet Çambel

Halet Çambel (27 August 1916 – 12 January 2014) was a Turkish archaeologist and Olympic fencer.

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Halfway Creek Site

The Halfway Creek Site is an archaeological site located near Carnestown, Florida.

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Haliotis cracherodii

Haliotis cracherodii (black abalone) is a species of large edible sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Haliotidae, the abalones.

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Hallam L. Movius

Hallam Leonard Movius (1907–1987) was an American archaeologist most famous for his work on the Palaeolithic period.

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Halldóra Eldjárn

Halldóra Eldjárn (24 November 1923 – 21 December 2008) was the wife of Icelandic President Kristján Eldjárn and First Lady of Iceland from 1968 to 1980.

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Hallstadt

Hallstadt is a town in the Upper Franconian district of Bamberg on the left bank of the Main, 4 km north of Bamberg.

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Halltorp

Halltorp is one of the earliest manor houses on the island of Öland, Sweden, dating from the 11th century AD.

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Halos

Halos (Ἅλος) or Halus was a settlement in Ancient Greece, in the region of Achaea Phthiotis, on the West side of the Pagasetic Gulf.

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Halteres (ancient Greece)

Halteres (ἁλτῆρες, from "ἅλλομαι" - hallomai, "leap, spring"; cf. "ἅλμα" - halma, "leaping") were a type of dumbbells used in Ancient Greece.

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Haluza

Haluza (الخلصة) (חלוצה), also known as Halasa, Chellous (Χελλοὺς in Greek, although in the 6th-century Madaba Map the town appears as ΕΛΟΥϹΑ), Elusa, al-Khalasa and al-Khalūṣ (Arabic), is a city in the Negev, Israel, that was once part of the Nabataean Incense Route.

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Hamaxitus

Hamaxitus (Hamaxitos) was an ancient Greek city in the south-west of the Troad region of Anatolia which was considered to mark the boundary between the Troad and Aeolis.

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Hammer of Thor (monument)

The Hammer of Thor is a tall, t-shaped, man-made rock formation, located along the Arnaud River in the Ungava Peninsula, Quebec, Canada.

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Hammerscale

Hammerscale, also written hammer scale, is a flaky or spheroidal byproduct of the iron forging process (for modern equivalent, see mill scale).

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Hammerstone

In archaeology, a hammerstone is a hard cobble used to strike off lithic flakes from a lump of tool stone during the process of lithic reduction.

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Hampson Archeological Museum State Park

Hampson Archeological Museum State Park is a Arkansas state park in Mississippi County, Arkansas in the United States.

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Hampton Down Stone Circle

The Hampton Down Stone Circle is a stone circle located near to the village of Portesham in the south-western English county of Dorset.

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Hampton Roads Naval Museum

The Hampton Roads Naval Museum is one of ten Navy museums that are operated by the Naval History & Heritage Command.

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Hand compass

A hand compass (also hand bearing compass or sighting compass) is a compact magnetic compass capable of one-hand use and fitted with a sighting device to record a precise bearing or azimuth to a given target or to determine a location.

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Hand spinning

Spinning is an ancient textile art in which plant, animal or synthetic fibres are drawn out and twisted together to form yarn.

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Hanford Site

The Hanford Site is a decommissioned nuclear production complex operated by the United States federal government on the Columbia River in the U.S. state of Washington.

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Hanna Marcussen

Hanna Elise Marcussen (born 4 September 1977) is Oslo's vice Mayor for Urban Development and a Norwegian politician for the Green Party.

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Hannah Green book series

Hannah Green, PhD is the fictional main protagonist of Adrian Praetzellis's textbooks-as-novels Death by Theory and Dug to Death, a series of two books that teach archaeological theory through story.

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Hannah Marie Wormington

Hannah Marie Wormington (September 5, 1914 – May 31, 1994) was an American archaeologist known for her writings and fieldwork on southwestern and Paleo-Indians archaeology over a long career that lasted almost sixty years.

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Hanover–Berlin high-speed railway

The Hanover–Berlin high-speed railway is a 258 kilometre railway line linking the German cities of Hanover and Berlin The Wolfsburg-Berlin section was built as a new line and runs largely parallel to the Lehrter Bahn (the old Berlin-Hanover railway) opened in 1871.

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Hans Benndorf

Hans Benndorf (December 13, 1870 – February 11, 1953) was an Austrian physicist born in Zurich, and died in Graz.

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Hans Hildebrand

Hans Olof Hildebrand Hildebrand (5 April 1842 in Stockholm – 2 February 1913) was a Swedish archeologist.

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Hans Lietzmann

Hans Lietzmann (2 March 1875 – 25 June 1942) was a German Protestant theologian and church historian who was a native of Düsseldorf.

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Hans Posse

Dr.

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Hans Tietze

Hans Tietze (May 1, 1880 in Prague – April 4, 1954 in New York City) was an Austrian art historian and member of the Vienna School of Art History.

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Hans-Georg Stephan

Hans-Georg Stephan (born 30 May 1950) is a German university professor specializing in European medieval archaeology and post-medieval archaeology.

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Hans-Joachim Merker

Hans-Joachim Merker (born 7 October 1929 in Merseburg, died 18 August 2014 in BerlinBaumgarten HG. Professor Dr. med. Hans-Joachim Merker (1929–2014). Ann Anat. 2015 Jan;197:1-2.) was a German physician and anatomist.

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Haplogroup E-M215 (Y-DNA)

E-M215, also known as E1b1b and formerly E3b, is a major human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup.

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Haplogroup E-V68

Haplogroup E-V68, also known as E1b1b1a, is a major human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup found in North Africa, the Horn of Africa, Western Asia and Europe.

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Har Gilo

Har Gilo (הַר גִּלֹה, lit. Mount Gilo) is an Israeli settlement organized as a community settlement located about five kilometers south of Jerusalem, and two kilometers west of Bethlehem in the northern Judean hills of the West Bank.

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Har Karkom

Har Karkom ("Mountain of Saffron", also called Jabal Ideid) is a mountain in the southwest Negev desert in Israel, half way between Petra and Kadesh Barnea.

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Har Senaim

Har Senaim or Senaim is an archaeological site that sits on a peak near Mount Hermon in the Israeli-occupied portion of the Golan Heights, north east of Kiryat Shmona and from Banias.

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Harald Szeemann

Harald Szeemann (11 June 1933 – 18 February 2005) was a Swiss curator and artist and art historian.

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Haraldskær Woman

The Haraldskær Woman (or Haraldskjaer Woman) is a bog body of a woman found naturally preserved in a bog in Jutland, Denmark, and dating from about 490 BC (pre-Roman Iron Age).

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Hardstone

Hardstone is an unscientific term, mostly encountered in the decorative arts or archaeology, that has a similar meaning to semi-precious stones, or gemstones.

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Hardstone carving

Hardstone carving is a general term in art history and archaeology for the artistic carving of predominantly semi-precious stones (but also of gemstones), such as jade, rock crystal (clear quartz), agate, onyx, jasper, serpentine, or carnelian, and for an object made in this way.

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Harfleur

Harfleur is a commune in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northern France.

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Hargesheim

Hargesheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Harimaru

Harimau or Tiger Cave is a limestone cavern in the Indonesian island of Sumatra where the island's first known rock art has been discovered.

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Harney Basin

The Harney Basin is an endorheic basin in southeastern Oregon in the United States at the northwestern corner of the Great Basin.

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Harold C. Fleming

Harold Crane Fleming (December 23, 1926 – April 29, 2015) was an American anthropologist and historical linguist, specializing in the cultures and languages of the Horn of Africa.

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Harold L. Dibble

Harold Lewis Dibble (1951 – 10 June 2018) was an American Paleolithic archaeologist.

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Harold Plenderleith

Harold James Plenderleith MC FRSE FCS (19 September 1898 – 2 November 1997) was a 20th century Scottish art conservator and archaeologist.

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Harold S. Gladwin

Harold Sterling Gladwin (1883–1983) was an American archaeologist, anthropologist, and stockbroker born in New York City.

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Harpymimus

Harpymimus is a basal ornithomimosaurian theropod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous Period of what is now Mongolia.

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Harrell Site

The Harrell Site, also known as the M.D. Harrell Site, is a prehistoric Native American archeological site near South Bend in southern Young County, Texas.

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Harri Moora

Harri Moora (in Ehavere, Kuremaa Parish – 2 May 1968 in Tallinn) was an Estonian archaeologist.

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Harriet Boyd Hawes

Harriet Boyd Hawes (October 11, 1871 – March 31, 1945) was a pioneering American archaeologist, nurse, and relief worker.

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Harriet Cosgrove

θHarriet 'Hattie' Siliman Cosgrove (1887–1970) was an archaeologist trained in the Southwestern United States.

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Harrison County, Ohio

Harrison County is a county located in the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Harrison Ford

Harrison Ford (born July 13, 1942) is an American actor and film producer.

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Harrow Museum

The Harrow Museum, known as the Headstone Manor & Museum, is the local history museum for the London Borough of Harrow in northwest London, England.

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Harry Burton (Egyptologist)

Harry Burton (13 September 1879 – 27 June 1940) was an English Egyptologist and archaeological photographer.

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Harry Charles Purvis Bell

Harry Charles Purvis Bell (21 September 1851 – 6 September 1937), more often known as HCP Bell, was a British civil servant and a commissioner in the Ceylon Civil Service.

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Harry Longueville Jones

Harry Longueville Jones (1806–1870) was a Welsh archæologist, artist, Inspector of Schools for Wales and leading founding member of the Cambrian Archaeological Association.

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Harry Robertson (musician)

Harry Robertson (19 November 1932 – 17 January 1996) was a musician, bandleader, music director and composer.

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Hartley Outdoor Education Center

Hartley Outdoor Education Center is a member of the Saginaw Intermediate School District located northwest of St. Charles, Michigan in Saginaw County.

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Hartmut Thieme

Hartmut Thieme (born 20 November 1947) is a German prehistoric archaeologist at the Institut für Denkmalpflege in Hannover.

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Harvard Irish Mission

Between the years 1932 and 1936 a team of American academics from Harvard University, Massachusetts, led by Earnest Hooton conducted a pioneering anthropological study of Ireland, north and south, which was called the Harvard Irish Mission.

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Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute

The Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University, commonly known as the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute (HURI), is a research institute affiliated with Harvard University devoted to Ukrainian studies, including the history, culture, language, literature, and politics of Ukraine.

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Harvard University Herbaria

The Harvard University Herbaria and Botanical Museum are institutions located on the grounds of Harvard University at 22 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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Harvey Whitehouse

Harvey Whitehouse is chair of social anthropology and professorial fellow of Magdalen College at the University of Oxford.

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Hasanlu Lovers

The Hasanlu Lovers are human remains found by a team from the University of Pennsylvania led by Robert Dyson at the Teppe Hasanlu archaeological site, located in the Solduz Valley in the West Azerbaijan Province of Iran, in 1972.

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Haschbach am Remigiusberg

Haschbach am Remigiusberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hashem El Tarif

Hashem El Tarif is a mountain located in northeast Egyptian, Sinai, close to the border of modern Israel.

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Hasmonean royal winter palaces

The Hasmonean royal winter palaces are a complex of Hasmonean and Herodian buildings from the Second Temple period, which were discovered in the western plain of Jericho valley, at Tulul Abu al-'Alayiq, near the place where the Roman road connecting Jericho with Jerusalem enters Wadi Qelt.

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Hasmukh Dhirajlal Sankalia

Hasmukh Dhirajlal Sankalia (10 December 1908 – 28 January 1989) was an Indian archaeologist, specialising in Proto- and Ancient Indian history.

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Hatfield College, Durham

Hatfield College is a college of Durham University in England.

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Hatula

Hatula is an early Neolithic archeological site in the Judean hills south of Latrun, beside Nahal Nachshon, in Israel, west of Jerusalem.

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Haua Fteah

Haua Fteah is a large karstic cave located in the Cyrenaica in northeastern Libya.

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Hausweiler

Hausweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Havering Sixth Form College

Havering Sixth Form College (alternatively styled Havering VI Form College), abbreviated as HSFC, is a sixth form college in Wingletye Lane, Hornchurch in the London Borough of Havering, East London, England.

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Hawkman

Hawkman is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Hawkman (Carter Hall)

Hawkman (Carter Hall) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Hawkstone Grail

The Hawkstone Grail is a small stone cup located at Hawkstone Manor in Shropshire, England which is purported to be a Holy Grail by owner Graham Phillips.

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Haya people

The Haya are an ethnic and linguistic tribe based in the Bukoba District, Muleba District and Karagwe District of Kagera Region in northwestern Tanzania, East Africa.

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Hayman Rooke

Major Hayman Rooke (20 February 1723 – 18 September 1806) became an antiquary on his retirement from the Army.

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Hayo Vierck

Hayo Vierck (born 5 August 1939, Bentheim; d. 16 March 1989, Reichenau Island) was a German archaeologist, who made a distinguished contribution to German Early Medieval archaeology through research in the industrial arts.

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Hội An wreck

The Hội An Wreck lies 22 miles off the coast of central Vietnam in the South China Sea, at approximately.

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Hódmezővásárhely

Hódmezővásárhely (Вашархељ/Vašarhelj, Ionești) is a city in south-east Hungary, on the Great Hungarian Plain, at the meeting point of the Békés-Csanádi Ridge and the clay grassland surrounding the river Tisza.

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Hörschhausen

Hörschhausen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Høllen, Lindesnes

Høllen is a village in Lindesnes municipality in Vest-Agder county, Norway.

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Hüffler

Hüffler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump

Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump is a buffalo jump located where the foothills of the Rocky Mountains begin to rise from the prairie 18 km west of Fort Macleod, Alberta, Canada on highway 785.

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Hearth

In historic and modern usage, a hearth is a brick- or stone-lined fireplace, with or without an oven, used for heating and originally also used for cooking food.

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Heather Hurst

Heather Hurst (born 1975) is an American archaeologist and archaeological illustrator.

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Heather McKillop

Heather Irene McKillop is a Canadian-American archaeologist, academic, and Maya scholar, noted in particular for her research into ancient Maya coastal trade routes, seafaring, littoral archaeology, and the long-distance exchange of commodities in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

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Heather Pringle

Heather Pringle is a prize-winning Canadian non-fiction author and journalist, focusing on archaeology.

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Hector Catling

Hector William Catling, CBE, FSA (26 June 192415 February 2013) was a British archaeologist who served as director of the British School at Athens between 1971 and 1989.

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Hefersweiler

Hefersweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Heidelberg University Library

The University Library Heidelberg (Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg) is the central library of the University of Heidelberg.

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Heiki Valk

Heiki Valk (born 7 May 1959 in Tartu) is an Estonian archaeologist.

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Heiko Steuer

Heiko Steuer (born 30 October 1939) is a German archaeologist, notable for his research into social and economic history in early Europe.

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Heiligenburg Castle

Heiligenburg Castle (Burg Heiligenburg) is a castle on the hill of Heiligenberg in the district of Schwalm-Eder-Kreis, Hesse, Germany.

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Heimaey

Heimaey, literally Home Island, is an Icelandic island.

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Heimatforscher

Heimatforscher, also called Heimatkundler, is a German language description for somebody researching his homeland, home town or region.

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Heimweiler

Heimweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Heinrich Brunn

Heinrich Brunn (23 January 1822, Wörlitz – 23 July 1894, Josephstal near Schliersee, Upper Bavaria) was a German archaeologist.

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Heinrich Bulle

Heinrich Bulle (11 December 1867 – 6 April 1945) was a German archaeologist born in Bremen.

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Heinrich Dressel

Heinrich Dressel (June 16, 1845 in Rome – July 17, 1920 in Teisendorf) was a German archaeologist.

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Heinrich Kohl

Heinrich Kohl (4 May 1877, Kreuznach – 26 September 1914, Moronvilliers) was a German architectural historian and archaeologist.

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Heinrich Lissauer

Heinrich Lissauer (September 12, 1861 – September 21, 1891) was a German neurologist born in Neidenburg (today Nidzica, Poland).

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Heinrich Menu von Minutoli

Heinrich Menu (from 1820 Freiherr) von Minutoli (12 May 1772, Geneva – 16 September 1846, Lausanne) was a Prussian Generalmajor, explorer and archaeologist.

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Heinrich Nissen

Heinrich Nissen (born 3 April 1839 in Hadersleben; died 29 February 1912 in Bonn) was a German professor of ancient history.

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Heinrich Schenkl

Heinrich Schenkl (29 January 1859, Innsbruck – 3 December 1919, Vienna) was an Austrian classical philologist.

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Heinrich Schliemann

Heinrich Schliemann (6 January 1822 – 26 December 1890) was a German businessman and a pioneer in the field of archaeology.

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Heinrich Schroeteler

Dr.

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Heinrich Wankel

Heinrich Wankel (Czech: Jindřich Wankel; July 15, 1821, Prague – April 5, 1897, Olomouc) was a Bohemian palaeontologist and archaeologist.

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Heinrich Weinel

Heinrich Weinel (28 April 1874, Vonhausen – 29 September 1936, Jena) was a German Protestant theologian.

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Heinrich Wolfgang Ludwig Dohrn

Heinrich Wolfgang Ludwig Dohrn (16 June 1838, Braunschweig – 1 October 1913, Florence) was a German zoologist, entomologist and malacologist.

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Heinz History Center

The Senator John Heinz History Center, an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution, is the largest history museum in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, United States.

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Heinz Kähler

Heinz Kähler (21 January 1905 in Tetenbüll, Germany – 9 January 1974 in Cologne, Germany) was an ancient art historian and archaeologist.

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Heinzenhausen

Heinzenhausen on the Lauter is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg

Heleen W.A.M. Sancisi-Weerdenburg (23 May 1944, in Haarlem – 28 May 2000, in Utrecht), was a Dutch ancient historian, specializing in classical Greek and Achaemenid history.

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Helen F. James

Helen Frances James (born May 22, 1956) is an American paleontologist and paleornithologist who has published extensively on the fossil birds of the Hawaiian Islands.

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Helen Fisher (anthropologist)

Helen E. Fisher is an American anthropologist, human behavior researcher, and self-help author.

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Helen Geake

Helen Mary Geake is an archaeologist who was one of the key members of Channel 4's popular and long-running archaeology series Time Team, presented by Tony Robinson, along with Mick Aston and Phil Harding.

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Helen of Zadar

Helen of Zadar (Jelena) (died 8 October 976), also known as Helen the Glorious, was the queen consort of the Kingdom of Croatia, as the wife of King Michael Krešimir II, from 946 to 969, a period which was marked by "peace, order and expeditious growth".

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Helen Perlstein Pollard

Helen Perlstein Pollard (born 1946) is an American academic ethnohistorian and archaeologist, noted for her publications and research on pre-Columbian cultures in the west-central Mexico region.

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Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly

Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly is a British Germanist and Founder of WiGS (Women in German Studies).

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Helen Waterhouse

Helen Thomas Waterhouse, Lady Waterhouse (5 March 1913 – 9 September 1999) was a British archaeologist and classical scholar specialising in prehistoric Laconia (Sparta).

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Helena Bonet Rosado

Helena Bonet Rosado (born 1953, València) is a Spanish archaeologist who specialises in Iberian material culture.

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Helene J. Kantor

Helene J. Kantor (July 15, 1919 – January 13, 1993) was a Near Eastern Archeologist and Art Historian in the Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago, best known for her work at Chogha Mish from 1961 through 1978.

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Helge Ingstad

Helge Marcus Ingstad (30 December 1899 – 29 March 2001) was a Norwegian explorer.

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Heliciculture

Heliciculture, also known as heliculture, commonly known as snail farming, is the process of raising land snails specifically for human use, either to use their flesh as edible escargot, or more recently, to obtain snail slime for use in cosmetics, or snail eggs for human consumption as a type of caviar.

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Heliodorus (ambassador)

Heliodorus (Ἡλιόδωρος) was a Greek ambassador sent to the court of King Bhagabhadra by Antialcidas (Greek King of Taxila) in 113 B.C. He is known for building a pillar called the "Khamb Baba" or "Heliodurus Pillar" which still exists in Vidisha, India near Bhopal, India.

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Helios Overture

Carl Nielsen's Helios Overture, Opus 17, is a concert overture which was first performed by the Royal Orchestra, conducted by Johan Svendsen, on 8 October 1903 in the large hall of the Odd Fellows Mansion in Copenhagen.

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Hella Eckardt

Hella Eckardt is an archaeologist who specialises in Roman archaeology and material culture and an Associate Professor at the University of Reading.

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Helladic chronology

Helladic chronology is a relative dating system used in archaeology and art history.

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Hellenistic influence on Indian art

Hellenistic influence on Indian art reflects the artistic influence of the Greeks on Indian art following the conquests of Alexander the Great, from the end of the 4th century BCE to the first centuries of our era.

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Helmut de Terra

Helmut de Terra (1900 in Guben, Germany - 1981 in Bern, Switzerland) was a geologist, explorer, archaeologist, author and anthropologist.

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Helmuth Theodor Bossert

Helmuth Theodor Bossert (September 11, 1889 – February 5, 1961) was a German art historian, philologist and archaeologist.

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Hemel Hempstead

Hemel Hempstead is a new town in Hertfordshire, England.

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Henchir-Aïn-Dourat

Henchir-Aïn-Dourat, also known as Ad-Duwayrat or Henchir Durat, is a former Roman–Berber civitas and archaeological site in Tunisia.

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Henchir-Bel-Aït

Henchir-Bel-Aït is a locality and archaeological site in Tunisia.

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Henchir-Bir-El-Menadla

Bir el Menadla (Bir el Menadla) is a locality and archaeolgical site in Governorate de Mahdia (Al Mahdiyah), Tunisia (North Africa).

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Henchir-Ezzguidane

Henchir-Ezzguidane or Henchir el Zguidane is a locality in Tunisia.

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Henchir-Guennara

Henchir-Guennara is a locality and Archaeological site in Tunisia 53.5km southwest of Tunis, Henchir-Guennara is nearby to Jebel ed Derijah, Jebel Ghaoues and Ksar Tyr.

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Henchir-Mâtria

Henchir-Mâtria is an archaeological and prehistoric site in northern Tunisia.

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Henning Franzmeier

Henning Franzmeier is a German archaeologist and Egyptologist with the Roemer- und Pelizaeus-Museum Hildesheim and University College London (UCL).

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Hennweiler

Hennweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Henri Arnold Seyrig

Henri Arnold Seyrig (10 November 1895 – 21 January 1973) was a French archaeologist, numismatist, and historian of antiquities.

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Henri Breuil

Henri Édouard Prosper Breuil (28 February 1877 – 14 August 1961), often referred to as Abbé Breuil, was a French Catholic priest and member of the Society of Jesus, archaeologist, anthropologist, ethnologist and geologist.

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Henri de Contenson

Henri de Contenson Henri de Contenson (born 4 March 1926 in Paris), is a French Archaeologist and was the Research Director at CNRS, The Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (National Center for Scientific Research), a research organization funded by France's Ministry of Research.

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Henri Fleisch

Reverend Father Henri Fleisch (1 January 1904 – 10 February 1985) was a French archaeologist, missionary and Orientalist, known for his work on classical Arabic language and Lebanese dialect and prehistory in Lebanon.

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Henri Fontaine

Henri Fontaine (born in 1924 in Normandy, France) is a French Roman Catholic missionary.

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Henri Frankfort

Henri "Hans" Frankfort (24 February 1897 – 16 July 1954) was a Dutch Egyptologist, archaeologist and orientalist.

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Henri Gadeau de Kerville

Henri Gadeau de Kerville (17 December 1858 in Rouen – 26 July 1940 in Bagnères-de-Luchon) was a French zoologist, entomologist, botanist and archeologist best known for his photographs of these subjects and especially for his work "Les Insectes phosphorescents: notes complémentaires et bibliographie générale (anatomie physiologie et biologie): avec quatre planches chromolithographiées", Rouen, L. Deshays, 1881.

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Henri Hubert

Henri Hubert (23 June 1872 – 25 May 1927) was a French archaeologist and sociologist of comparative religion who is best known for his work on the Celts and his collaboration with Marcel Mauss and other members of the Année Sociologique.

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Henri Jordan

Henri Jordan (30 September 1833, Berlin – 10 November 1886, Konigsberg) was a German classical scholar who specialized in Roman archaeological topography.

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Henri Lavachery

Henri Alfred Lavachery (May 6, 1885 - December 1, 1972) was a Belgian archeologist and ethnologist.

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Henri René Guieu

Henri René Guieu (19 March 1926 – 2 January 2000) was a French science fiction writer and a famous ufologist who published primarily with the pseudonym Jimmy Guieu.

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Henri-Paul Francfort

Henri-Paul Francfort is a French archaeologist and member ("directeur de recherche") of the CNRS.

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Henrietta Marie

The Henrietta Marie was a slave ship that carried captive Africans to the West Indies, where they were sold as slaves.

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Henrietta, New York

Henrietta is a town in Monroe County, New York, United States and a suburb of Rochester.

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Henriette Groenewegen-Frankfort

Henriette Antonia "Jettie" Groenewegen-Frankfort (1896 – 1982) was a Dutch archaeologist and an expert on ancient art.

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Henry Avray Tipping

Henry Avray Tipping (22 August 1855 – 16 November 1933) was a French-born British writer on country houses and gardens, a garden designer, and Architectural Editor of Country Life magazine for 17 years.

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Henry Balfour

Henry Balfour FRS (11 April 1863 in Croydon – 9 February 1939) was a British archaeologist, and the first curator of the Pitt Rivers Museum.

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Henry Chapman Mercer

Henry Chapman Mercer (June 24, 1856 – March 9, 1930) was an American archeologist, artifact collector, tile-maker, and designer of three distinctive poured concrete structures: Fonthill, his home, the Moravian Pottery and Tile Works, and the Mercer Museum.

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Henry de Lumley

Henry de Lumley (born 1934 in Marseille) is a French archeologist, geologist and prehistorian.

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Henry Faulds

Henry Faulds (1 June 1843 – 24 March 1930) was a Scottish physician, missionary and scientist who is noted for the development of fingerprinting.

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Henry Field (anthropologist)

Henry Field (December 15, 1902 – January 4, 1986) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Henry Gee

Henry Ernest Gee (born 24 April 1962 in London, England) is a British paleontologist, evolutionary biologist and senior editor of the scientific journal Nature.

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Henry George Bohn

Henry George Bohn (4 January 179622 August 1884) was a British publisher.

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Henry Gurdon Marquand

Henry Gurdon Marquand (April 11, 1819 – February 26, 1902) was an American financier, philanthropist and collector.

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Henry Hall (Egyptologist)

Dr Henry Reginald Holland Hall MBE, FBA, FSA (30 September 1873 – 13 October 1930) was an English Egyptologist and historian.

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Henry Heras

Henry Heras (11 September 1888, Barcelona, Spain - 14 December 1955, Bombay, India) was a Spanish Jesuit priest, archeologist and historian in India.

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Henry Herbert, 6th Earl of Carnarvon

Henry George Alfred Marius Victor Francis Herbert, 6th Earl of Carnarvon (7 November 1898 – 22 September 1987) was a British peer.

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Henry Hoyle Howorth

Sir Henry Hoyle Howorth KCIE FRS (1 July 1842 – 15 July 1923) was a British Conservative politician, barrister and amateur historian and geologist.

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Henry Jones, Sr.

Professor Henry Walton Jones, Sr. is a fictional character in the ''Indiana Jones'' franchise.

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Henry Nelson O'Neil

Henry Nelson O'Neil (1817 in Russia – 1880) was an historical genre painter and minor Victorian writer.

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Henry Nicholas Greenwell

Henry Nicholas Greenwell (9 January 1826 – 18 May 1891) was an English merchant credited with establishing Kona coffee as an internationally known brand.

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Henry Noel Humphreys

Henry Noel Humphreys (1810–1879), was a British illustrator, naturalist, entomologist, and numismatist.

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Henry Reynolds (archaeologist)

Henry Reynolds was an important Archaeologist in Georgia.

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Henry Richmond Droop

Henry Richmond Droop (September 12 1832 – March 21, 1884) was an English mathematician.

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Henry Sandon

Henry George Sandon, MBE (born 10 August 1928) is an English antique expert, specialising in ceramics and is a notable authority on Royal Worcester porcelain.

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Henry Sulley

Henry Sulley (1845–1940) was an English architect and writer on the temples of Jerusalem.

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Henry Testot-Ferry

Henry Bernard Alfred Testot-Ferry also known as Henry de Ferry (5 February 1826, La Chapelle-la-Reine, Seine-et-Marne – 9 November 1869, Bussières, Saône-et-Loire) was a French geologist, archeologist and paleontologist.

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Henry Timberlake

Henry Timberlake (1730 or 1735 – September 30, 1765) was a colonial Anglo-American officer, journalist, and cartographer.

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Henry Town

Henry Town, Henry Towne, or Henries Towne was an early English colonial settlement near Cape Henry, the southern point and gateway to the Chesapeake Bay in the Colony and Dominion of Virginia, now in modern Virginia Beach, Virginia, on the East Coast of the United States.

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Henry Wellcome

Sir Henry Solomon Wellcome FRS (August 21, 1853 – July 25, 1936) was an American British pharmaceutical entrepreneur.

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Henschtal

Henschtal is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hensol Castle

Hensol Castle (previously Hensol House) is a castellated mansion in the gothic architecture style dating from the late 17th century or early 18th century, now a wedding and conference venue for The Vale Resort.

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Hephzibah, Georgia

Hephzibah is a city in southern Richmond County, in the U.S. state of Georgia.

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Heraclius the Elder

Heraclius the Elder (Heraclius; Ἡράκλειος; died 610) was an East Roman (Byzantine) general and the father of Byzantine emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641).

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Heraklion (regional unit)

Heraklion (Περιφερειακή ενότητα Ηρακλείου) is one of the four regional units of Crete.

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Herald: An Interactive Period Drama

Herald is a single-player adventure video game, or "interactive period drama", for Microsoft Windows, macOS, and Linux.

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Herbert Bloch

Herbert Bloch (18 August 1911 – 6 September 2006) was a professor of Classics at Harvard and a renowned authority on Greek historiography, Roman epigraphy and archaeology, medieval monasticism, and the transmission of classical culture and literature.

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Herbert E. Balch

Herbert Ernest Balch (4 November 1869 – 27 May 1958) MA FSA was an English archaeologist, naturalist, caver and geologist who explored the caves of the Mendip Hills and pioneered many of the techniques used by modern cavers.

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Herbert Jankuhn

Herbert Jankuhn (born 8 August 1905 in Angerburg, East Prussia – 30 April 1990 in Göttingen) was a German archaeologist and supporter of the Nazi Party.

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Herbert Weld Blundell

Herbert Joseph Weld Blundell (1852 – 5 February 1935) was an English traveller in Africa, archaeologist, philanthropist and yachtsman.

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Herchweiler

Herchweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hergenfeld

Hergenfeld is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Heritage Conservation Act (New Brunswick)

The Heritage Conservation Act (Loi sur la conservation du patrimoine) is a provincial statute which allows for the preservation of cultural heritage properties and areas in the province of New Brunswick, Canada.

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Heritage Council (Ireland)

The Heritage Council (An Comhairle Oidhreachta) is an organisation created by the Irish government to "engage, educate and advocate to develop a wider understanding of the vital contribution that our heritage makes to our social, environmental and economic well-being." The Heritage Council was established under the Heritage Act of 1995.

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Heritage objects (South Africa)

Heritage objects in South Africa are objects or collections formally declared as such by the South African Heritage Resource Agency in order to control their export.

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Heritage science

Heritage science is cross-disciplinary scientific research of cultural heritage.

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Heritage tourism

Cultural heritage tourism (or just heritage tourism or diaspora tourism) is a branch of tourism oriented towards the cultural heritage of the location where tourism is occurring.

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Herman de Vries de Heekelingen

Dr.

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Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate (anthropologist)

Herman F.C. ten Kate, the younger (7 February 1858 – 3 February 1931) was a Dutch anthropologist.

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Hermann Škorpil

Václav Hermenegild Škorpil (Вацлав Херменгилд Шкорпил; 8 February 185825 June 1923) was a Czech-Bulgarian archaeologist and museum worker credited along with his brother Karel with the establishment of those two disciplines in Bulgaria, as well as a geologist, botanist, architect and librarian.

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Hermann Guthe

Hermann Guthe (May 10, 1849, Westerlinde - August 11, 1936, Leipzig) was a German Semitic scholar.

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Hermann Junker

Hermann Junker (November 29, 1877 in Bendorf – January 9, 1962 in Vienna) was a German archaeologist best known for his discovery of the Merimde-Benisalam site in the West Nile Delta in Lower Egypt in 1928.

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Hermann Lenz

Hermann Karl Lenz (26 February 1913 in Stuttgart – 12 May 1998 in Munich) was a German writer of poetry, fiction stories, and novels.

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Hermann Sauppe

Hermann Sauppe (9 December 1809 – 15 September 1893) was a German classical philologist and epigraphist born in Weesenstein, near Dresden.

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Hermann Strebel

Hermann Wilhelm Strebel (Hamburg, 1 January 1834 – Hamburg, 6 November 1914) was a merchant, ethnologue and a malacologist from Germany and Mexico.

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Hermann von Rohden

Hermann von Rohden (21 February 1852, Barmen – 21 February 1916, Haguenau) was a German educator and classical archaeologist known for his analyses of ancient Roman terracotta artifacts.

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Hermeneutics

Hermeneutics is the theory and methodology of interpretation, especially the interpretation of biblical texts, wisdom literature, and philosophical texts.

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Hermine Speier

Hermine "Erminia" Speier (28 May 1898 in Frankfurt am Main - 12 January 1989 in Montreux) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Hermitage of Santa María de Lara

The church of Santa María de Lara, also known as the Ermita (hermitage) de Santa María, is one of the last surviving Visigoth churches on the Iberian Peninsula, located near the village of Quintanilla de las Viñas, not far from the city of Burgos, in the Castile and León region in Spain, Archeologists have yet to confirm its period of construction but the church has been placed by scholars have placed it between the 7th century, where it is more frequently located, and the 10th century.

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Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda

Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda (c. 1536 – after 1575, dates uncertain) was a Spanish shipwreck survivor who lived among the Indians of Florida for 17 years.

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Hernando de Soto

Hernando de Soto (1495 – May 21, 1542) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who led the first Spanish and European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (through Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and most likely Arkansas).

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Herne Bay Museum and Gallery

The Seaside Museum Herne Bay is a local museum in Herne Bay, Kent, England.

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Herod the Great

Herod (Greek:, Hērōdēs; 74/73 BCE – c. 4 BCE/1 CE), also known as Herod the Great and Herod I, was a Roman client king of Judea, referred to as the Herodian kingdom.

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Heroic Warriors (Masters of The Universe)

All of these characters were released in the vintage Mattel toyline.

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Herren-Sulzbach

Herren-Sulzbach (“Lords’ Sulzbach”) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Herrera Period

The Herrera Period is a phase in the history of Colombia.

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Herrera, Seville

Herrera is a Spanish municipality located in the province of Seville, in Andalusia.

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Herschweiler-Pettersheim

Herschweiler-Pettersheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hersonissos

Hersonissos (Χερσόνησος(meaning peninsula), Chersónisos), also transliterated as Chersonisos and Hersónisos, is a town and a municipality in the north of Crete, bordering the Mediterranean / Aegean Sea.

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Hesperoyucca whipplei

Hesperoyucca whipplei (syn. Yucca whipplei) (chaparral yucca, our Lord's candle, Spanish bayonet, Quixote yucca or foothill yucca is a species of flowering plant closely related to, and formerly usually included in, the genus Yucca. It is native to southern California, United States and Baja California, Mexico, where it occurs mainly in chaparral, coastal sage scrub, and oak woodland plant communities at altitudes of 0–2500 m.

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Hester A. Davis

Hester A. Davis (1930-2014) was an American archaeologist.

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Heterarchy

A heterarchy is a system of organization where the elements of the organization are unranked (non-hierarchical) or where they possess the potential to be ranked a number of different ways.

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Hettenrodt

Hettenrodt is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hetty Goldman

Hetty Goldman (December 19, 1881 – May 4, 1972) was an American archaeologist.

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Heuneburg

The Heuneburg is a prehistoric hillfort by the river Danube in Hundersingen near Herbertingen, between Ulm and Sigmaringen, Baden-Württemberg, in the south of Germany, close to the modern borders with Switzerland and Austria.

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Heunischenburg

The Heunischenburg is a stone fortification of the late Urnfield period near the Upper Franconian town of Kronach in Germany.

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Hi-de-Hi!

Hi-de-Hi! is a BBC television sitcom shown on BBC1 from 1 January 1980 to 30 January 1988.

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Hiawatha First Nation

The Hiawatha First Nation is an Ojibway First Nations reserve located on the north shore of Rice Lake east of the Otonabee River in Ontario, Canada.

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Hiberno-Roman relations

Hiberno-Roman relations refers to the relationships (mainly commercial and cultural) which existed between Ireland (Hibernia) and the ancient Roman Empire, which lasted from the time of Julius Caesar to the beginning of the 5th century AD in Western Europe.

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Hickory Dickory Dock (novel)

Hickory Dickory Dock is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie and first published in the UK by the Collins Crime Club on 31 October 1955Chris Peers, Ralph Spurrier and Jamie Sturgeon.

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Hickory Ridge Cemetery Archeological Site

The Hickory Ridge Cemetery Archeological Site (8ES1280) is an archaeological site in Pensacola, Escambia County Florida.

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Hidden Cave

Hidden Cave is an archaeological cave site located in the Great Basin near Fallon, Nevada, United States.

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Hidden Treasures of Swat

Hidden Treasures of Swat is a non-fiction book based on the achievements of Italian Archaeological Mission (IAM) in Pakistan and Department of Archaeology and Museums (DOAM) Pakistan.

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Hierotopy

Hierotopy (from ἱερός, sacred + τόπος, place, space) is the creation of sacred spaces viewed as a special form of human creativity and also a related academic field where specific examples of such creativity are studied.

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Hifz-ur-Rehman

Hifz-ur-Rehman (died 1970) was a Pakistani archaeologist, historian and linguist.

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High island

In geology (and sometimes in archaeology), a high island or volcanic island is an island of volcanic origin.

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Highdown Hill

Highdown Hill is a prominent hill in the South Downs, as its name suggests, reaching a height of.

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Highgate Cemetery

Highgate Cemetery is a place of burial in north London, England.

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Highlander III: The Sorcerer

Highlander III: The Sorcerer, also known as Highlander III, Highlander III: The Magician, Highlander III: The Final Dimension, Highlander: The Final Dimension and Highlander 3: The Final Conflict, is a 1994 action-adventure fantasy film and the third installment in the ''Highlander'' film series.

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Hilary Deacon

Hilary John Deacon (10 January 1936 – 25 May 2010) was a South African archaeologist and academic.

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Hilary du Cros

Dr.

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Hilchenbach

Hilchenbach is a town in the Siegen-Wittgenstein Kreis (district) of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

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Hilda Lorimer

Elizabeth Hilda Lockhart Lorimer (30 May 1873 – 1 March 1954) was a British classical scholar who spent her career at Oxford University.

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Hilde Domin

Hilde Domin (27 July 1909 – 22 February 2006) is the pseudonym of Hilde Palm (née Löwenstein), a German lyric poet and writer.

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Hill farming

Hill farming is extensive farming in upland areas, primarily rearing sheep, although historically cattle were often reared extensively in upland areas.

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Hill Palace, Tripunithura

Hill Palace is the largest archaeological museum in Kerala, located at Tripunithura, Kochi, near Karingachira area.

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Hillforts in Britain

Hillforts in Britain refers to the various hillforts within the island of Great Britain.

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Hillscheid

Hillscheid is an Ortsgemeinde – a community belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde – in the Westerwaldkreis in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hilma Contreras

Hilma Contreras Castillo (December 8, 1913 – January 15, 2006) was a Dominican writer, born in San Francisco de Macorís.

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Hindi Granth Karyalay

Hindi Granth Karyalay is an Indian publishing house and specialized book store dealing in books pertaining to Jainology and Indology in English, Hindi, Sanskrit, Prakrit and Apabhramsha.

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Hinduism in Russia

hare krishno Hinduism has been spread in Russia primarily due to the work of missionaries from the Vaishnava Hindu organization International Society for Krishna Consciousness and by itinerant Swamis from India and small communities of Indian immigrants.

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Hinson Mounds

The Hinson Mounds (8Cr180) comprise an archeological site in Collier County, Florida near Miles City.

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Hinzweiler

Hinzweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hippidion

Hippidion (meaning little horse) is an extinct genus of horse that lived in South America from the Pliocene to the mid-Holocene, between two million and 8,000 years ago.

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Hippos

Hippos (Ἵππος, "horse") is an archaeological site in Israel, located on a hill overlooking the Sea of Galilee.

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Hiram M. Hiller Jr.

Hiram Milliken Hiller Jr. (March 8, 1867 – August 8, 1921), was an American physician, medical missionary, explorer, and ethnographer.

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Hirschfeld, Rhineland-Palatinate

Hirschfeld (Hunsrück) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hiruko the Goblin

Hiruko the Goblin is a 1991 Japanese horror film directed by Shinya Tsukamoto and starring Kenji Sawada.

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Hisako, Princess Takamado

, born on 10 July 1953, is a member of the Japanese Imperial Family as the widow of Norihito, Prince Takamado.

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Hiscock Site

The Hiscock Site is an archaeological site in Byron, Western New York, United States that has yielded many mastodon and paleo-Indian artifacts.

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HistoAtlas

HistoAtlas is a free collection of historic geographic information of the human culture all over the world.

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Historia Regum Britanniae

Historia regum Britanniae (The History of the Kings of Britain), originally called De gestis Britonum (On the Deeds of the Britons), is a pseudohistorical account of British history, written around 1136 by Geoffrey of Monmouth.

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Historian

A historian is a person who studies and writes about the past, and is regarded as an authority on it.

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Historical archaeology

Historical archaeology is a form of archaeology dealing with places, things, and issues from the past or present when written records and oral traditions can inform and contextualize cultural material.

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Historical climatology

Historical climatology is the study of historical changes in climate and their effect on human history and development.

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Historical Diving Society

The Historical Diving Society (HDS) was formed in 1990 in the United Kingdom by a group of enthusiasts whose aim is to preserve and protect diving heritage.

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Historical document

Historical documents are original documents that contain important historical information about a person, place, or event and can thus serve as primary sources as important ingredients of the historical methodology.

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Historical linguistics

Historical linguistics, also called diachronic linguistics, is the scientific study of language change over time.

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Historical Metallurgy Society

The Historical Metallurgy Society is a British learned society providing an international forum for exchange of information and research in historical metallurgy.

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Historical method

Historical method comprises the techniques and guidelines by which historians use primary sources and other evidence, including the evidence of archaeology, to research and then to write histories in the form of accounts of the past.

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Historical mystery

The historical mystery or historical whodunit is a subgenre of two literary genres, historical fiction and mystery fiction.

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Historical race concepts

The concept of race as a rough division of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) has a long and complicated history.

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Historical reliability of the Acts of the Apostles

The historical reliability of the Acts of the Apostles, the principal historical source for the Apostolic Age, is of interest for biblical scholars and historians of Early Christianity as part of the debate over the historicity of the Bible.

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Historical revisionism

In historiography, the term historical revisionism identifies the re-interpretation of the historical record.

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Historicity of Homer

The extent of the historical basis of the Homeric epics has been a topic of scholarly debate for centuries.

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Historicity of the Bible

The historicity of the Bible is the question of the Bible's "acceptability as a history," in the words of Thomas L. Thompson, a scholar who has written widely on this topic as it relates to the Old Testament.

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Historicity of the Book of Mormon

The question of the historical authenticity of the Book of Mormon has long been a source of contention between most members of the Latter Day Saint movement and non-members.

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Historiography and nationalism

Historiography is the study of how history is written.

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Historiography of early Christianity

Historians have used a variety of sources and methods in exploring and describing the history of early Christianity, commonly known as Christianity before the First Council of Nicaea in 325.

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Historiography of Scotland

The historiography of Scotland refers to the sources and critical methods used by scholars to come to an understanding of the history of Scotland.

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Historiography of the United States

The historiography of the United States refers to the studies, sources, critical methods and interpretations used by scholars to study the history of the United States.

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Historisch Museum Den Briel

The Historisch Museum Den Briel (English: Brielle Historical Museum) is a Dutch museum located in Brielle.

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History

History (from Greek ἱστορία, historia, meaning "inquiry, knowledge acquired by investigation") is the study of the past as it is described in written documents.

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History Hunters

History Hunters was a British television series that aired on Channel 4 from 1998 to 1999.

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History Ireland

History Ireland is a magazine with a focus on the history of Ireland rather than archaeology.

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History Museum of Armenia

The History Museum of Armenia is a museum in Armenia with departments of Archaeology, Numismatics, Ethnography, Modern History and Restoration.

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History of abortion

The practice of abortion—the termination of a pregnancy—has been known since ancient times.

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History of Afghanistan

The history of Afghanistan, (تاریخ افغانستان, د افغانستان تاريخ) began in 1747 with its establishment by Ahmad Shah Durrani.

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History of African immigrants in London

This article charts the history of African immigration in London, England, from Roman times to the present day.

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History of Alabama

Alabama became a state of the United States of America on December 14, 1819.

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History of Anatolia

The history of Anatolia (Asia Minor) can be roughly subdivided into prehistory, Ancient Near East (Bronze Age and Early Iron Age), Classical Anatolia, Hellenistic Anatolia, Byzantine Anatolia, the age of the Crusades followed by the gradual Seljuk/Ottoman conquest in the 13th to 14th centuries, Ottoman Anatolia (14th to 19th centuries) and the modern history of the Republic of Turkey.

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History of Andean South America

The history of human habitation in the Andean region of South America stretches from circa 15,000 BCE to the present day.

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History of anthropology by country

Anthropology is the study of various aspects of humans within past and present societies.

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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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History of art

The history of art focuses on objects made by humans in visual form for aesthetic purposes.

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History of Basque whaling

The Basques were among the first to catch whales commercially, as opposed to aboriginal whaling, and dominated the trade for five centuries, spreading to the far corners of the North Atlantic and even reaching the South Atlantic.

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History of Bellary

Ballari (ಬಳ್ಳಾರಿ pronounced) is a historic city in Ballari District in Karnataka state, India.

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History of Bengal

The history of Bengal includes modern-day Bangladesh and West Bengal in the eastern part of the Indian subcontinent, at the apex of the Bay of Bengal and dominated by the fertile Ganges delta.

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History of Bern

The city of Bern, founded in 1191 and first mentioned in a document in 1208, grew to become the biggest aristocratic city-state north of the Alps and a major power in the Old Swiss Confederacy.

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History of Bidar

Bidar is a historic place located in the north-eastern part of the South Indian state of Karnataka.

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History of Bielsko-Biała

Bielsko-Biała is a city in southern Poland created after the merging of two closely situated cities, Bielsko and Biała, in 1951.

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History of Bucharest

The history of Bucharest covers the time from the early settlements on the locality's territory (and that of the surrounding area in Ilfov County) until its modern existence as a city, capital of Wallachia, and present-day capital of Romania.

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History of Buckinghamshire

Although the name Buckinghamshire is Anglo Saxon in origin meaning The district (scire) of Bucca's home (referring to Buckingham in the north of the county) the name has only been recorded since about the 12th century.

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History of Burundi

Burundi is one of the few countries in Africa, along with its closely linked neighbour Rwanda among others (such as Botswana, Lesotho, and Swaziland), to be a direct territorial continuation of a pre-colonial era African state.

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History of California before 1900

Human history in California began when indigenous Americans first arrived some 13,000–15,000 years ago.

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History of Cardiff

The history of Cardiffa City and County Borough and the capital of Walesspans at least 6,000 years.

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History of chess

The history of chess can be traced back nearly 1500 years, although the earliest origins are uncertain.

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History of Chinese archaeology

Chinese archaeology has been practiced since the Song Dynasty (960-1279) with early practices of antiquarianism.

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History of Christchurch, Dorset

Christchurch is a borough and town in the county of Dorset on the English Channel coast, adjoining Bournemouth in the west, with the New Forest to the east.

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History of clothing and textiles

The study of the history of clothing and textiles traces the availability and use of textiles and other materials.

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History of Colchester

Colchester is a historic town located in Essex, England.

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History of construction

The History of construction overlaps many other fields like structural engineering and relies on other branches of science like archaeology, history and architecture to investigate how the builders lived and recorded their accomplishments.

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History of cosmetics

The history of cosmetics spans at least 7,000 years and is present in almost every society on earth.

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History of dance

The history of dance is difficult to access because dance does not often leave behind clearly identifiable physical artifacts that last over millennia, such as stone tools, hunting implements or cave paintings.

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History of Devon

Devon is a county in south west England, bordering Cornwall to the west with Dorset and Somerset to the east.

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History of Dorset

Dorset is a rural county in south west England.

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History of early Tunisia

Human habitation in the North African region occurred over one million years ago.

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History of Eastern role-playing video games

Eastern role-playing video games (RPGs) are RPGs developed in East Asia.

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History of espionage

Espionage, as well as other intelligence assessment, has existed since ancient times.

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History of European exploration in Tibet

Tibet has attracted European missionaries and explorers for over 500 years.

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History of Fiji

The majority of Fiji's islands were formed through volcanic activity starting around 150 million years ago.

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History of Florida

The history of Florida can be traced to when the first Native Americans began to inhabit the peninsula as early as 14,000 years ago.

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History of Georgia (U.S. state)

The history of Georgia in the United States of America spans pre-Columbian time to the present-day U.S. state of Georgia.

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History of glass in sub-Saharan Africa

Due to various differences in cultural histories and environmental resources, West African nations developed glass traditions distinct from Egypt, North Africa and the rest of the world.

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History of Greenland

The history of Greenland is a history of life under extreme Arctic conditions: currently, an ice cap covers about 80 percent of the island, restricting human activity largely to the coasts.

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History of Guatemala

The Maya civilization (2,000 BC – 250 AD) was among those that flourished in the region, with little contact with cultures outside Mesoamerica.

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History of Hawaii

The history of Hawaii describes the era of human settlements in the Hawaiian Islands.

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History of herbalism

The history of herbalism is closely tied with the history of medicine from prehistoric times up until the development of the germ theory of disease in the 19th century.

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History of Indian archaeology

The history of Indian archaeology spans from the 19th century to the present, and includes a wide variety of archaeologists investigating the region's history.

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History of Indigenous Australians

The History of Indigenous Australians began at least 65,000 years ago when Aboriginal Australians populated Australia.

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History of Ireland (400–800)

The early medieval history of Ireland, often called Early Christian Ireland, spans the 5th to 8th centuries, from the gradual emergence out of the protohistoric period (Ogham inscriptions in Primitive Irish, mentions in Greco-Roman ethnography) to the beginning of the Viking Age.

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History of Ireland (800–1169)

The history of Ireland 800–1169 covers the period in the history of Ireland from the first Viking raids to the Norman invasion.

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History of Jacksonville, Florida

The city of Jacksonville, Florida began to grow in the late 18th century as Cow Ford, settled by British colonists.

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History of Japanese cuisine

This article traces the history of cuisine of Japan.

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History of Jämtland

The history of Jämtland dates back thousands of years, starting with the arrival of humans.

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History of jewellery in Ukraine

Jewellery as an art form originated as an expression of human culture.

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History of Karachi

The area of Karachi ('''کراچی'''., ڪراچي) in Sindh, Pakistan, has a natural harbor and has been used as fishing port by local fisherman belonging to Sindhi tribes since prehistory.

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History of knitting

Knitting is the process of using two or more needles to loop yarn into a series of interconnected loops in order to create a finished garment or some other type of fabric.

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History of Kumamoto Prefecture

The history of Kumamoto Prefecture has been documented from paleolithic times to the present.

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History of literature

The history of literature is the historical development of writings in prose or poetry that attempt to provide entertainment, enlightenment, or instruction to the reader/listener/observer, as well as the development of the literary techniques used in the communication of these pieces.

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History of London

The history of London, the capital city of England and the United Kingdom, extends over 2000 years.

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History of Louisville, Kentucky

The history of Louisville, Kentucky spans hundreds of years, with thousands of years of human habitation.

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History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania

This article details a history of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania.

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History of Madagascar

The history of Madagascar is distinguished clearly by the early isolation of the landmass from the ancient supercontinent containing Africa and India, and by the island's late colonization by human settlers arriving in outrigger canoes from the Sunda islands between 200 BC and 500 AD.

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History of Marine Animal Populations

The History of Marine Animal Populations (HMAP) is an international, interdisciplinary research initiative.

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History of Maryland

The recorded history of Maryland dates back to the beginning of European exploration, starting with the Venetian John Cabot, who explored the coast of North America for England in 1498.

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History of Maui

This article summarizes the history of the island of Maui.

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History of measurement

The earliest recorded systems of weights and measures originate in the 3rd or 4th millennium BC.

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History of Medicine Society

Founded by Sir William Osler in 1912, the History of Medicine Society (formally 'section'), at the Royal Society of Medicine (RSM), London, is one of the oldest History of Medicine societies in the world and is one of the four founder committees of the British Society for the History of Medicine.

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History of Mesopotamia

The history of Mesopotamia ranges from the earliest human occupation in the Lower Paleolithic period up to the Late antiquity.

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History of Mexico

The history of Mexico, a country in the southern portion of North America, covers a period of more than three millennia.

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History of Milton Keynes

This history of Milton Keynes details its development from the earliest human settlements, through the plans for a 'new city' for 250,000 people in south central England, its subsequent urban design and development, to the present day.

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History of Missouri

The history of Missouri begins with settlement of the region by indigenous people during the Paleo-Indian period beginning in about 12,000 BC.

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History of Mizoram

The history of Mizoram basically encompasses the account of transition in the occupation of Mizoram which lies in the remotest part of northeast India.

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History of money circulation in Azerbaijan

As a result of archaeological investigations, the analysis of numismatic materials reveals that money circulation in the territory of Azerbaijan existed in the 7th-6th centuries BC.

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History of Montana

This is a broad outline history of the state of Montana in the United States.

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History of Natchez, Mississippi

The city of Natchez, Mississippi, was founded in 1716 as Fort Rosalie.

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History of Nigeria

The history of Nigeria can be traced to prehistoric settlers (Nigerians) living in the area as early as 1100 BC.

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History of North America

History of North America encompasses the past developments of people populating the continent of North America.

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History of Nunavut

The region now known as Nunavut has supported a continuous population for approximately 4000 years.

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History of Paraguay (to 1811)

Long before Spanish conquistadors discovered Paraguay for King Charles V in 1524, semi-nomadic Chaco Indian tribes populated Paraguay’s rugged landscape.

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History of Paris

The oldest traces of human occupation in Paris, discovered in 2008 near the Rue Henri-Farman in the 15th arrondissement, are human bones and evidence of an encampment of hunter-gatherers dating from about 8000 BC, during the Mesolithic period.

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History of Pensacola, Florida

The history of Pensacola, Florida begins long before the Spanish claimed founding of the modern city in 1698.

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History of Peru

The history of Peru spans 4 millennia, extending back through several stages of cultural development in the mountain region and the coastal desert.

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History of Petersburg, Virginia

The history of Petersburg, Virginia as a modern settlement begins in the 17th century when it was first settled.

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History of poison

The history of poison stretches from before 4500 BC to the present day.

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History of Portuguese wine

The history of Portuguese wine has been influenced by Portugal's relative isolationism in the world's wine market, with the one notable exception of its relationship with the British.

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History of Puducherry

The City of Puducherry on the southeast coast of India does not have a vishva history from antiquity.

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History of Quebec

Quebec has played a special role in French history; the modern province occupies much of the land where French settlers founded the colony of Canada (New France) in the 17th and 18th centuries.

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History of Richmond Hill, Ontario

The history of Richmond Hill began when the First Nations came and settled in the area.

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History of roads in Ireland

There have been routes and trackways in Ireland connecting settlements and facilitating trade since ancient times and the country now has an extensive network of public roads connecting all parts of the island.

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History of Rome

Roman history has been among the most influential to the modern world, from supporting the tradition of the rule by law to influencing the American Founding Fathers to the creation of the Catholic church.

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History of Rome (Mommsen)

The History of Rome (Römische Geschichte) is a multi-volume history of ancient Rome written by Theodor Mommsen (1817–1903).

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History of Russia

The History of Russia begins with that of the East Slavs.

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History of Rwanda

Human occupation of Rwanda is thought to have begun shortly after the last ice age.

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History of Saint Lucia

According to some, Saint Lucia was first inhabited sometime between 1000 and 500 BC by the Ciboney people, but there is not a lot of evidence of their presence on the island.

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History of Sarasota, Florida

The settlement of Zarazote was founded in Florida in 1763; the town of Sarasota was incorporated in 1902.

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History of Sardinia

Archaeological evidence of prehistoric human settlement on the island of Sardinia is present in the form of nuraghes and others prehistoric monuments, which dot the land.

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History of Saudi Arabia

The history of Saudi Arabia in its current form as a state began with its foundation in 1744, although the human history of the region extends as far as 20,000 years ago.

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History of Scandinavia

The history of Scandinavia is the history of the geographical region of Scandinavia and its peoples.

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History of Schleswig-Holstein

The history of Schleswig-Holstein consists of the corpus of facts since the pre-history times until the modern establishing of the Schleswig-Holstein state.

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History of science and technology in China

Ancient Chinese scientists and engineers made significant scientific innovations, findings and technological advances across various scientific disciplines including the natural sciences, engineering, medicine, military technology, mathematics, geology and astronomy.

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History of science and technology in Korea

Like most other regions in the world, science and technology in Korea has experienced periods of intense growth as well as long periods of stagnation.

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History of science fiction

The literary genre of science fiction is diverse, and its exact definition remains a contested question among both scholars and devotees.

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History of seafood

The harvesting and consuming of seafoods are ancient practices that may date back to at least the Upper Paleolithic period which dates to between 50,000 and 10,000 years ago.

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History of slavery in New York

Historically, the enslavement of overwhelmingly African people in the United States, began in New York as part of the Dutch slave trade.

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History of Slovakia

This article discusses the history of the territory of Slovakia.

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History of Somerset

Somerset is a historic county in the south west of England.

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History of South America

The history of South America is the study of the past, particularly the written record, oral histories, and traditions, passed down from generation to generation on the continent of South America.

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History of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands

The history of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands is relatively recent.

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History of St. Augustine, Florida

The history of St.

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History of St. Mary's College of Maryland

St. Mary's College of Maryland, originally known as St.

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History of Sumer

The history of Sumer, taken to include the prehistoric Ubaid and Uruk periods, spans the 5th to 3rd millennia BC, ending with the downfall of the Third Dynasty of Ur around 2004 BC, followed by a transitional period of Amorite states before the rise of Babylonia in the 18th century BC.

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History of Swansea

The recorded history of Swansea in Wales covers a period of continuous occupation stretching back a thousand years, while there is archaeological evidence of prehistoric human occupation of the surrounding area for thousands of years before that.

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History of Swindon

Swindon is a town in Wiltshire in the South West of England.

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History of Switzerland

Since 1848, the Swiss Confederation has been a federal state of relatively autonomous cantons, some of which have a history of confederacy that goes back more than 700 years, putting them among the world's oldest surviving republics.

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History of Syria

The history of Syria covers events which occurred on the territory of the present Syrian Arab Republic and events which occurred in Syria (region).

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History of Tampa, Florida

Tampa is a U.S. city in Hillsborough County on the western coast of the U.S. state of Florida.

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History of Tanzania

The African Great Lakes nation of Tanzania dates formally from 1964, when it was formed out of the union of the much larger mainland territory of Tanganyika and the coastal archipelago of Zanzibar.

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History of Tasmania

The history of Tasmania begins at the end of the most recent ice age (approximately 10,000 years ago) when it is believed that the island was joined to the Australian mainland.

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History of Texas

The recorded history of Texas begins with the arrival of the first Spanish conquistadors in the region of North America now known as Texas in 1519, who found the region populated by numerous Native American / Indian tribes.

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History of the Americas

The prehistory of the Americas (North, South, and Central America, and the Caribbean) begins with people migrating to these areas from Asia during the height of an Ice Age.

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History of the Balkans

The Balkans is an area situated in Southeastern and Eastern Europe.

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History of the English penny (c. 600 – 1066)

The history of the English penny can be traced back to the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of the 7th century: to the small, thick silver coins known to contemporaries as pæningas or denarii, though now often referred to as sceattas by numismatists.

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History of the family

The history of the family is a branch of social history that concerns the sociocultural evolution of kinship groups from prehistoric to modern times.

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History of the forest in Central Europe

The history of the forest in Central Europe is characterised by thousands of years of exploitation by people.

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History of the Jews in Austria

The history of the Jews in Austria probably begins with the exodus of Jews from Judea under Roman occupation.

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History of the Jews in Georgia

Georgian Jews (ქართველი ებრაელები kartveli ebraelebi) are one of the oldest communities in Georgia, tracing their migration into the country during the Babylonian captivity in 6th century BC.

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History of the National Register of Historic Places

The History of the National Register of Historic Places began in 1966 when the United States government passed the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA), which created the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).

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History of the Outer Hebrides

The Hebrides were settled early on in the settlement of the British Isles, perhaps as early as the Mesolithic era, around 8500-8250 BC, after the climatic conditions improved enough to sustain human settlement.

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History of the Philippines

The history of the Philippines is believed to have begun with the arrival of the first humans using rafts or boats at least 67,000 years ago as the 2007 discovery of Callao Man suggested.

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History of the University of Chicago

Two years after the closure of the original University of Chicago campus in Bronzeville (1857-1886), supporters succeeded in raising money for a new location.

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History of the world

The history of the world is the history of humanity (or human history), as determined from archaeology, anthropology, genetics, linguistics, and other disciplines; and, for periods since the invention of writing, from recorded history and from secondary sources and studies.

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History of Thessaloniki

The history of the city of Thessaloniki is a long one, dating back to the Ancient Greeks.

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History of Toruń

The first settlement in the vicinity of Toruń is dated by archaeologists to 1100 BC (Lusatian culture).

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History of Uppsala

The city of Uppsala is one of the oldest in Sweden.

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History of urban planning

This article delineates the history of urban planning, a technical and political process concerned with the use of land and design of the urban environment, including air, water, and the infrastructure passing into and out of urban areas such as transportation and distribution networks.

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History of Utah

The History of Utah is an examination of the human history and social activity within the state of Utah located in the western United States.

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History of Vancouver

Vancouver is a city in British Columbia, Canada.

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History of Venezuela

The history of Venezuela reflects events in areas of the Americas colonized by Spain starting 1522; amid resistance from indigenous peoples, led by Native caciques, such as Guaicaipuro and Tamanaco.

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History of Vilnius

This article is about the history of Vilnius, the capital and largest city of Lithuania.

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History of Virginia

The History of Virginia begins with documentation by the first Spanish explorers to reach the area in the 1500s, when it was occupied chiefly by Algonquian, Iroquoian, and Siouan peoples.

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History of Virginia Beach, Virginia

The history of Virginia Beach, Virginia, goes back to the Native Americans who lived in the area for thousands of years before the English colonists landed at Cape Henry in April 1607 and established their first permanent settlement at Jamestown a few weeks later.

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History of water supply and sanitation

The history of water supply and sanitation is one of a logistical challenge to provide clean water and sanitation systems since the dawn of civilization.

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History of West Africa

The history of West Africa began with the first human settlements around 4,000 BCE.

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History of Williamsburg, Virginia

Williamsburg, Virginia, has had a long history dating to the 17th century.

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History of Wiltshire

Wiltshire is a historic county located in the South West England region.

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History of wine

The earliest archaeological evidence of grape wine has been found at sites in Georgia (BC), Iran (BC), Greece (BC), and Sicily (BC) although there is earlier evidence of a wine made from fermented grapes among other fruits being consumed in China (c. 7000–5500 BC).

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History of Zakynthos

Zakynthos (Ζάκυνθος, Zante to the Italians, is a Greek island in the Ionian Sea. It is the third largest of the Ionian Islands. Today, Zakynthos is a separate regional unit of the Ionian Islands region, and its only municipality. It covers an area of and its coastline is roughly in length. The name, like all similar names ending in -nthos, is pre-Mycenaean or Pelasgian in origin. In Greek mythology the island was said to be named after Zakynthos, the son of a legendary Arcadian chief Dardanus. Zakynthos is a now tourist destination, with an international airport served by charter flights from northern Europe. The history of Zakynthos is long and complex, even by Greek standards. After the fall of the Byzantine Empire, it has been held by Naples, the Ottoman Turks, Venice, the French, Russians, British, Italians and Germans.

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History of Zambia

This article deals with the history of the country now called Zambia from prehistoric times to the present.

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History's Mysteries

History's Mysteries is an American documentary television series that aired on the History Channel.

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History, Classics and Archaeology Subject Centre

The Subject Centre for History, Classics and Archaeology was one of 24 Subject Centres funded within the Higher Education Academy to promote high quality learning and teaching in UK Higher Education (HE) by providing subject-based support for sharing innovations and good practices.

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HistoryMiami

HistoryMiami Museum, formerly known as the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, is a museum located in Miami, Florida, United States.

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Hittite sites

The geography of the Hittite Empire is inferred from Hittite texts on the one hand, and from archaeological excavation on the other.

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Hittites

The Hittites were an Ancient Anatolian people who played an important role in establishing an empire centered on Hattusa in north-central Anatolia around 1600 BC.

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Hitzacker Archaeological Centre

The Hitzacker Archaeological Centre (Archäologisches Zentrum Hitzacker) is an archaeological open-air museum in Hitzacker in the German state of Lower Saxony.

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HMCS Canada

CGS Canada was a patrol vessel, sometimes referred to as a cruiser, in the Fisheries Protection Service of Canada, an enforcement agency that was part of the Department of Marine and Fisheries.

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HMS Fowey (1744)

HMS Fowey was a fifth rate warship of the Royal Navy, launched on 14 August 1744 in Hull, England.

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Hoard

A hoard or "wealth deposit" is an archaeological term for a collection of valuable objects or artifacts, sometimes purposely buried in the ground, in which case it is sometimes also known as a cache.

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Hohenöllen

Hohenöllen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hohenfels-Essingen

Hohenfels-Essingen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hohenfreyberg Castle

Hohenfreyberg Castle (Burg Hohenfreyberg), together with Eisenberg Castle directly opposite, forms a castle group in the southern Allgäu that is visible from a long way off.

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Hohlenstein-Stadel

Hohlenstein-Stadel is a cave located in the Hohlenstein cliff (not to be confused with the Hohle Fels) at the southern rim of the Lonetal (valley of the Lone) in the Swabian Jura in Germany.

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Hohokam Pima National Monument

The Hohokam Pima National Monument is an ancient Hohokam village within the Gila River Indian Community, near present-day Sacaton, Arizona.

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Hoko River Archeological Site

The Hoko River Archeological Site complex, located in Clallam County in the northwestern part of the U.S. state of Washington, is a 2,500-year-old fishing camp.

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Hold Me (Fleetwood Mac song)

"Hold Me" is a single by British-American rock group Fleetwood Mac.

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Holden/Marolt Mining and Ranching Museum

The Holden/Marolt Mining and Ranching Museum is located on the former Holden Mining and Smelting Company facility on the western edge of the city of Aspen, Colorado, United States.

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Holdenhurst

Holdenhurst is a small isolated village situated in green belt land in the north-east suburbs of Bournemouth, England.

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Holger Pedersen (astronomer)

Holger Pedersen (born 3 November 1946), Emeritus at the Niels Bohr Institute is a Danish astronomer at the European Southern Observatory.

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Holism

Holism (from Greek ὅλος holos "all, whole, entire") is the idea that systems (physical, biological, chemical, social, economic, mental, linguistic) and their properties should be viewed as wholes, not just as a collection of parts.

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Holism in science

Holism in science, or holistic science, is an approach to research that emphasizes the study of complex systems.

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Holly Hobbie

Holly Hobbie (born Denise Holly Ulinskas, 1944) is an American writer, watercolorist and illustrator.

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Holocene calendar

The Holocene calendar, also known as the Holocene Era or Human Era (HE), is a year numbering system that adds exactly 10,000 years to the currently dominant (AD or CE) numbering scheme, placing its first year near the beginning of the Holocene geological epoch and the Neolithic Revolution, when humans transitioned from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to agriculture and fixed settlements.

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Holocene extinction

The Holocene extinction, otherwise referred to as the Sixth extinction or Anthropocene extinction, is the ongoing extinction event of species during the present Holocene epoch, mainly as a result of human activity.

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Holy Blood of Wilsnack

The Holy Blood of Wilsnack was the name given to three hosts, which survived a fire in 1383 that burned the church and village to the ground.

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Holy Spirit Grotto

The Holy Spirit Grotto (La Gruta del Espíritu Santo in Spanish), also known as Corinto Cave, in Corinto, Morazán, El Salvador, is a registered national monument of petroglyphs.

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Holzbach

Holzbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Homberg, Kusel

Homberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Homer Thompson

Homer Armstrong Thompson (September 7, 1906 – May 7, 2000) was a leading classical archaeologist of the twentieth century, specializing in ancient Greece.

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Hominidae

The Hominidae, whose members are known as great apes or hominids, are a taxonomic family of primates that includes eight extant species in four genera: Pongo, the Bornean, Sumatran and Tapanuli orangutan; Gorilla, the eastern and western gorilla; Pan, the common chimpanzee and the bonobo; and Homo, which includes modern humans and its extinct relatives (e.g., the Neanderthal), and ancestors, such as Homo erectus.

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Hominization

Hominization, also called anthropogenesis, refers to the process of becoming human, and is used in somewhat different contexts in the fields of paleontology and paleoanthropology, archeology, philosophy, and theology.

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Homo floresiensis

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

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Homology (anthropology)

In anthropology and archaeology, homology is a type of analogy whereby two human beliefs, practices or artifacts are separated by time but share similarities due to genetic or historical connections.

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Homolovi State Park

Homolovi State Park is a state park of Arizona, USA, preserving over 300 Ancestral Puebloan archaeological sites.

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Hondh-Chillar massacre

The Hondh-Chillar massacre (ਹੋਂਦ-ਚਿੱਲੜ ਕਤਲੇਆਮ) refers to the killings of at least 32 Sikhs on 2 November 1984 in a village in the Rewari district of Haryana, allegedly by the members of Indian National Congress during the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

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Honey Camp Lagoon

Honey Camp Lagoon is a freshwater lagoon in Belize.

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Hong Kong Museum of History

The Hong Kong Museum of History is a museum which preserves Hong Kong's historical and cultural heritage.

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Honiara

Honiara is the capital city of the Solomon Islands, situated on the northwestern coast of Guadalcanal.

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Honolulu Rail Transit

The Honolulu Rail Transit Project (also known as the Honolulu High-Capacity Transit Corridor Project) is an urban rail rapid transit system under construction in Honolulu County, Oahu, Hawaii.

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Honoré Daumier

Honoré-Victorin Daumier (February 26, 1808February 10, 1879) was a French printmaker, caricaturist, painter, and sculptor, whose many works offer commentary on social and political life in France in the 19th century.

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Honoré Flaugergues

Pierre-Gilles-Antoine-Honoré Flaugergues, usually known as Honoré Flaugergues (May 16, 1755, Viviers, Ardèche – November 26, 1835 or November 20, 1830) was a French astronomer.

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Hoosac Wind Power Project

Hoosac Wind Power Project is a wind farm on Crum Hill in Monroe, Massachusetts and on Bakke Mountain in Florida, Massachusetts.

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Hopewell Culture National Historical Park

Hopewell Culture National Historical Park is a United States national historical park with earthworks and burial mounds from the Hopewell culture, indigenous peoples who flourished from about 200 BC to AD 500.

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Hoppstädten

Hoppstädten is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Hopton Castle

Hopton Castle is situated in the village of the same name which lies approximately halfway between Knighton and Craven Arms, in the English county of Shropshire.

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Horatio Brown

Horatio Robert Forbes Brown (16 February 1854 – 19 August 1926) was a Scottish historian who specialised in the history of Venice and Italy.

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Horbruch

Horbruch is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Horim Museum

Horim Museum is a museum in Seoul, South Korea.

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Horizon (archaeology)

In archaeology, the general meaning of horizon is a distinctive type of sediment, artifact, style or other cultural trait that is found across a large geographical area, from a limited time period.

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Hormuzd Rassam

Hormuzd Rassam (182616 September 1910) (ܗܪܡܙܕ ܪܣܐܡ), was an Assyriologist who made a number of important archaeological discoveries from 1877 to 1882, including the clay tablets that contained the Epic of Gilgamesh, the world's oldest literature.

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Horn, Germany

Horn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Horr's Island archaeological site

The Horr's Island archaeological site is a significant Archaic period archaeological site located on an island in Southwest Florida formerly known as Horr's Island.

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Horschbach

Horschbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Horse

The horse (Equus ferus caballus) is one of two extant subspecies of ''Equus ferus''.

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Horses in the Middle Ages

Horses in the Middle Ages differed in size, build and breed from the modern horse, and were, on average, smaller.

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Horses in warfare

The first use of horses in warfare occurred over 5,000 years ago.

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Horseshoe

A horseshoe is a fabricated product, normally made of metal, although sometimes made partially or wholly of modern synthetic materials, designed to protect a horse's hoof from wear.

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Horst Bredekamp

Horst Bredekamp (born 29 April 1947, in Kiel) is a German art historian.

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Horus Bird (Pharaoh)

Horus Bird, also known as Horus-Ba, is the serekh-name of a pharaoh who may have had a very short reign between the 1st dynasty and 2nd dynasty of Egypt.

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Horvat Galil

Horvat Galil is an archaeological site in the Upper Galilee, Israel, from the coast of the Mediterranean.

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Hospital Rock (Three Rivers, California)

Hospital Rock is a large quartzite rock in Sequoia National Park, located just off of the Generals Highway, on the Middle Fork of the Kaweah River.

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Hottenbach

Hottenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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House of Julia Felix

The House of Julia Felix is a large Roman villa in the ruined city of Pompeii.

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House of the County

The House of the County or Casa do Condado is since 2007 the museum of Vila Pouca de Aguiar in Portugal.

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Household archaeology

Household archaeology has a long history of anthropological inquiry.

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Houston Museum of Natural Science

The Houston Museum of Natural Science (abbreviated as HMNS) is a science museum located on the northern border of Hermann Park in Houston, Texas, United States.

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Hovgården

Hovgården is an archaeological site on the Lake Mälaren island of Adelsö in Ekerö Municipality in central-eastern Sweden.

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Hovyiat

Hovyiat (برنامه هويت., "Identity") was a biweekly TV program on Iran's IRIB's Channel 1 in 1996.

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How Art Made the World

How Art Made The World is a 2005 five-part BBC One documentary series, with each episode looking at the influence of art on the current day situation of our society.

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Howard Carter

Howard Carter (9 May 18742 March 1939) was a British archaeologist and Egyptologist who became world-famous after discovering the intact tomb (designated KV62) of the 18th Dynasty Pharaoh, Tutankhamun (colloquially known as "King Tut" and "the boy king"), in November 1922.

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Howel Williams

Howel Williams (October 12, 1898 – January 12, 1980) was a noted American geologist and volcanologist.

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Huaca de Chena

Huaca de Chena, also known as the Chena Pukara, is an Inca site on Chena Mountain, in the basin of San Bernardo, commune of Calera de Tango, Maipo Province, Chile.

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Huahine starling

The Huahine starling (Aplonis diluvialis) is an extinct bird from the genus Aplonis within the starling family, Sturnidae.

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Huamachuco District

Huamachuco District is one of the districts of the Sánchez Carrión province located in La Libertad Region in Peru.

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Huang Wenbi

Huang Wenbi (April 23, 1893 – December 18, 1966) was a Chinese archaeologist specializing in Xinjiang.

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Huang Xianfan

Huang Xianfan (zhuang) (November 13, 1899 – January 18, 1982) was a Chinese historian, ethnologist and educator.

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Huaraz Province

The Huaraz Province is one of twenty provinces of the Ancash Region in Peru.

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Hubert Rohde

Hubert Rohde (born 28 February 1929 in Hildesheim) is a German politician, representative of the German Christian Democratic Union.

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Huerfano Butte (Arizona)

Huerfano Butte (English: "Orphan Butte") is a small rocky butte located on the western flank of the Santa Rita Mountains in southeastern Pima County, Arizona.

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Hugh Andrew Johnstone Munro

Hugh Andrew Johnstone Munro (29 October 1819 – 30 March 1885) was a British classical scholar.

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Hugh Laurie

James Hugh Calum Laurie, (born 11 June 1959) is an English actor, director, musician, comedian, and author.

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Hugh Nevill

Hugh L. Nevill (1847 – 1897) was a British civil servant, best known for his scholarship and studies of the culture of Sri Lanka.

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Hugh Whistler

Hugh Whistler (28 September 1889 – 7 July 1943), F.Z.S., M.B.O.U. was an English police officer and ornithologist who worked in India.

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Hugo Blümner

Hugo Blümner (9 August 1844 Berlin – 1 January 1919 Zürich) was a German classical archaeologist and philologist.

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Hugo Winckler

Hugo Winckler (4 July 1863 – 19 April 1913) was a German archaeologist and historian who uncovered the capital of the Hittite Empire (Hattusa) at Boğazkale, Turkey.

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Huguenot Street Historic District

Historic Huguenot Street is located in New Paltz, New York, approximately north of New York City.

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Huhtiniemi mass grave

Huhtiniemi mass grave is a mass grave site with two graves and at least 15 bodies in Huhtiniemi, Lappeenranta, eastern Finland.

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Huis van Hilde

Huis van Hilde (Hilde's House) is the archaeology information centre and repository of the Dutch province North Holland, which was opened in Castricum early 2015.

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Hula Valley

The Hula Valley (עמק החולה, translit. Emek Ha-Ḥula; also transliterated as Huleh Valley) is an agricultural region in northern Israel with abundant fresh water.

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Human

Humans (taxonomically Homo sapiens) are the only extant members of the subtribe Hominina.

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Human Biology (journal)

Human Biology is a peer reviewed scientific journal, currently published by Wayne State University Press.

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Human evolution

Human evolution is the evolutionary process that led to the emergence of anatomically modern humans, beginning with the evolutionary history of primates – in particular genus Homo – and leading to the emergence of Homo sapiens as a distinct species of the hominid family, the great apes.

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Human feces

Human feces (or faeces in British English; fæx) are the solid or semisolid remains of the food that could not be digested or absorbed in the small intestine, but has been rotted down by bacteria in the large intestine.

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Human settlement

In geography, statistics and archaeology, a settlement, locality or populated place is a community in which people live.

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Humanities

Humanities are academic disciplines that study aspects of human society and culture.

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Humber River (Ontario)

The Humber River (French: Rivière Humber) is a river in Southern Ontario, Canada.

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Humboldt University of Berlin

The Humboldt University of Berlin (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, abbreviated HU Berlin), is a university in the central borough of Mitte in Berlin, Germany.

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Humfry Payne

Humfry Gilbert Garth Payne (19 February 1902 – 9 May 1936) was an English archaeologist, director of the British School of Archaeology in Athens from 1929 to his death.

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Humic acid

Humic acids are the result of a severe chemical extraction from the soil organic matter, and recently their natural existence was jeopardized, since it is a product of the chemical procedure.

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Hungarian language

Hungarian is a Finno-Ugric language spoken in Hungary and several neighbouring countries. It is the official language of Hungary and one of the 24 official languages of the European Union. Outside Hungary it is also spoken by communities of Hungarians in the countries that today make up Slovakia, western Ukraine, central and western Romania (Transylvania and Partium), northern Serbia (Vojvodina), northern Croatia, and northern Slovenia due to the effects of the Treaty of Trianon, which resulted in many ethnic Hungarians being displaced from their homes and communities in the former territories of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It is also spoken by Hungarian diaspora communities worldwide, especially in North America (particularly the United States). Like Finnish and Estonian, Hungarian belongs to the Uralic language family branch, its closest relatives being Mansi and Khanty.

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Hungarian mythology

Hungarian mythology includes the myths, legends, folk tales, fairy tales and gods of the Hungarians, also known as the Magyars.

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Hungarian prehistory

Hungarian prehistory (magyar őstörténet) spans the period of history of the Hungarian people, or Magyars, which started with the separation of the Hungarian language from other Finno-Ugric or Ugric languages around, and ended with the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin around.

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Hussein Bassir

Hussein Bassir is an Egyptian archaeologist of Giza Pyramids and one of the directors (field director) of the excavation team in the Valley of the Golden Mummies at Bahariya Oasis.

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Hutovo Blato

Hutovo Blato is a nature reserve and bird reserve located in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Hybrid (DC Comics)

The Hybrid are a fictional group of supervillains appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Hydraulic mining

Hydraulic mining, or hydraulicking, is a form of mining that uses high-pressure jets of water to dislodge rock material or move sediment.

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Hydroxylapatite

Hydroxylapatite, also called hydroxyapatite (HA), is a naturally occurring mineral form of calcium apatite with the formula Ca5(PO4)3(OH), but is usually written Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2 to denote that the crystal unit cell comprises two entities.

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Hyrax Hill Prehistoric Site and Museum

The Hyrax Hill site was proclaimed a national monument in 1945 and opened to the public in 1965.

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I Live My Life

I Live My Life is a 1935 American comedy-drama film starring Joan Crawford, Brian Aherne, and Frank Morgan, and is based on the story "Claustrophobia" by A. Carter Goodloe.

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I. H. N. Evans

Ivor Hugh Norman Evans (1886–1957) was a British anthropologist, ethnographer and archaeologist who spent most of his working life in peninsular British Malaya (now Malaysia) and in North Borneo (now Sabah, Malaysia).

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Iași Institute of Archaeology

The Iași Institute of Archaeology (Institutul de Arheologie Iași; abbreviation: IAI) is an institution of research in the field of archaeology under the auspices of the Romanian Academy.

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Ian Cameron Esslemont

Ian Cameron Esslemont (born 1962) is a Canadian writer.

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Ian Graham

Ian James Alastair Graham OBE (12 November 1923 – 1 August 2017) was a British Mayanist whose explorations of Maya ruins in the jungles of Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize helped establish the Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions published by the Peabody Museum of Harvard University.

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Ian Hodder

Ian Hodder FBA (born 23 November 1948 in Bristol) is a British archaeologist and pioneer of postprocessualist theory in archaeology that first took root among his students and in his own work between 1980-1990.

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Ian Morris (historian)

Ian Matthew Morris (born 27 January 1960) is a British archaeologist, historian and academic.

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Ian Richmond

Sir Ian Archibald Richmond, (10 May 1902 – 5 October 1965) was a British archaeologist and academic.

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Ian Tattersall

No description.

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Ica stones

The Ica stones are a collection of andesite stones found in Ica Province, Peru that bear a variety of diagrams.

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Ice rafting

Ice rafting is the transport of various materials by ice.

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Icehenge

Icehenge is a science fiction novel by American author Kim Stanley Robinson, published in 1984.

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Iceland

Iceland is a Nordic island country in the North Atlantic, with a population of and an area of, making it the most sparsely populated country in Europe.

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Ickham and Well

Ickham and Well is a mostly rural civil parish east of Canterbury in Kent, South East England.

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Iconoclasm

IconoclasmLiterally, "image-breaking", from κλάω.

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Ictineu 3

Ictineu 3 is a manned submersible capable of reaching depths of 1,200 m (3,900 ft), which makes it the ninth deepest submersible, owned by Ictineu submarins SL.

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Ida Caroline Eugenie Peelen

Ida Caroline Eugenie Peelen (1882–1965) was a Dutch art historian and museum director.

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Ida Hill

Ida Thallon Hill (August 11, 1875 – December 14, 1954) was an American archaeologist, classical scholar and historian.

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Idaho Museum of Natural History

The Idaho Museum of Natural History (IMNH) is the official state natural history museum of Idaho, located on the campus of Idaho State University (ISU) in Pocatello.

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Idar-Oberstein

Idar-Oberstein is a town in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Iddin-Dagan

Iddin-Dagan (Akkadian: Iddin-Dagān, inscribed di-din dda-gan; fl. c. 1910 BC — c. 1890 BC by the short chronology of the ancient Near East or c. 1975 BC — c. 1954 BC by the middle chronology) was the 3rd king of the dynasty of Isin.

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Identification key

In biology, an identification key is a printed or computer-aided device that aids the identification of biological entities, such as plants, animals, fossils, microorganisms, and pollen grains.

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Ieronymos II of Athens

Ieronymos II (Ierōnymos II,; born March 10, 1938) is the Archbishop of Athens and All Greece and as such the primate of the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Greece.

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Iestyn Davies

Iestyn Davies, (born 16 September 1979) is a British classical countertenor.

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Ightham

Ightham is a village in Kent, England, located approximately four miles east of Sevenoaks and six miles north of Tonbridge.

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Ignacio Bernal

Ignacio Bernal (February 13, 1910 in Paris - January 24, 1992 in Mexico City) was an eminent Mexican anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Ignatiy Stelletsky

Ignatius Yakovlevich Stelletskii (Игнатий Яковлевич Стеллецкий; February 3, 1878 - November 11, 1949) was a Russian and Soviet archaeologist, historian, and researcher of the underground tunnels of Moscow.

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Ignazio Cerio

Ignazio Cerio (1841 – 1921) was an influential but eccentric physician and amateur philosopher on the island of Capri, in Italy.

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Igor Dubov

Igor Vasilievich Dubov (Игорь Васильевич Дубов; 1947–2002) was a Russian archaeologist who excavated one of the largest settlements on the Volga trade route, Timerevo.

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Ihsan Ali

Ihasan Ali (Urdu: پروفيسر ڈاکٹر احسان على;(SI)) is a Pakistani archaeologist.

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Ihsan H. Nadiem

Ihsan H. Nadiem (born 1940) is a Pakistani archaeologist, museologist, author and poet.

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Ikh Khorig

The Ikh Khorig, or Great Taboo, is a 240 km² area in the Khentii Aimag (province) of Mongolia, believed by some to be the location of Genghis Khan’s grave.

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Ilana Halperin

Ilana Halperin (born 1973) is an artist with an interest in the relationships between geological phenomena and daily life.

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Ilısu Dam Campaign

The Ilısu Dam Campaign is a UK-based campaign working to stop the construction of the Ilısu Dam on the river Tigris in south east Turkey.

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Iles Purpuraires

Iles Purpuraires are a set of small islands off the western coast of Morocco at the bay located at Essaouira.

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Ilidža

Ilidža (Илиџа) is a municipality located in Sarajevo Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Illerup Ådal

Illerup Ådal (English: Illerup River-valley) is a river valley and archeological site located near Skanderborg in East Jutland, Denmark.

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Illinois Archaeological Survey

The Illinois Archaeological Survey is a society of professional archaeologists and other technical professionals, dedicated to identifying and preserving important archaeological resources throughout the state of Illinois.

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Illinois Country

The Illinois Country (Pays des Illinois, lit. "land of the Illinois (plural)", i.e. the Illinois people) — sometimes referred to as Upper Louisiana (la Haute-Louisiane; Alta Luisiana) — was a vast region of New France in what is now the Midwestern United States.

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Illinois State Museum

The Illinois State Museum is the official museum of the natural history of the U.S. state of Illinois.

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Illusive Man

The Illusive Man is a fictional character in BioWare's ''Mass Effect'' video game franchise.

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Illyrian languages

The Illyrian languages are a group of Indo-European languages that were spoken in the western part of the Balkans in former times by groups identified as Illyrians: Ardiaei, Delmatae, Pannonii, Autariates, Taulantii (see list of ancient tribes in Illyria).

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Illyrians

The Illyrians (Ἰλλυριοί, Illyrioi; Illyrii or Illyri) were a group of Indo-European tribes in antiquity, who inhabited part of the western Balkans.

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Image of God

The Image of God is a concept and theological doctrine in Judaism, Christianity, and Sufism of Islam, which asserts that human beings are created in the image and likeness of God.

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Imagine (educational magazine)

Imagine is an educational periodical for 7th-12th graders and published by the Center for Talented Youth (CTY) at Johns Hopkins University.

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Imperial Russian Archaeological Society

The Imperial Russian Archaeological Society (Императорское Русское археологическое общество), originally known as the Archaeological-Numismatic Society, was an archaeological society in the Russian Empire.

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In situ

In situ (often not italicized in English) is a Latin phrase that translates literally to "on site" or "in position".

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In the Courts of the Crimson Kings

In the Courts of the Crimson Kings is a 2008 alternate history science fiction novel by American writer S. M. Stirling.

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Ina Plug

Ina Plug (née Post) (born 5 August 1941) is a South African archaeozoologist (or zooarchaeologist), and teacher.

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Increase A. Lapham

Increase Allen Lapham (March 7, 1811 – September 14, 1875) was an author, scientist, and naturalist.

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Incremental dating

Incremental dating techniques allow the construction of year-by-year annual chronologies, which can be temporally fixed (i.e., linked to the present day and thus calendar or sidereal time) or floating.

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Independent Investigations Group

The Independent Investigations Group (IIG) is a volunteer-based organization founded by James Underdown in January 2000 at the Center for Inquiry-West (now Center for Inquiry – Los Angeles) in Hollywood, California.

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Index of branches of science

Science (from Latin scientia, meaning "knowledge") is a systematic enterprise that builds and organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about the universe.

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Index of history articles

History is the study of the past.

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Indian Key Historic State Park

Indian Key Historic State Park is an island within the Florida State Park system, located just a few hundred yards southeast of U.S. 1 within the Florida Keys.

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Indian Lake (New Jersey)

Indian Lake is a reservoir and unincorporated community situated 509 feet (155 m) above sea level in Denville Township, New Jersey.

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Indian Museum, Kolkata

The Indian Museum in Kolkata, also referred to as the Imperial Museum at Calcutta in British India era texts, is the largest and oldest museum in India and has rare collections of antiques, armour and ornaments, fossils, skeletons, mummies, and Mughal paintings.

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Indian Ocean trade

Indian Ocean Trade has been a key factor in East–West exchanges throughout history.

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Indian Science Congress Association

Indian Science Congress Association (ISCA) is a premier scientific organisation of India with headquarters at Kolkata, West Bengal.

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Indian Space Research Organisation

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is the space agency of the Government of India headquartered in the city of Bangalore.

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Indian threadfish

The Indian threadfish (Alectis indica), also known as the Indian threadfin, diamond trevally, mirror fish or plumed trevally, is a large species of coastal marine fish of the jack family, Carangidae.

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Indiana Jones

Dr.

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Indiana Jones (franchise)

Indiana Jones is an American media franchise based on the adventures of Dr. Henry Walton "Indiana" Jones, Jr., a fictional professor of archaeology.

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Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb

Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb is an action-adventure video game developed by The Collective, Inc. and published by LucasArts in 2003 for the Xbox, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 and OS X. It features cover art by Drew Struzan.

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Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis

Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis is a point-and-click adventure game by LucasArts originally released in 1992.

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Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine

Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine is a multi-platform action-adventure video game by LucasArts released in 1999.

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Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is a 1984 American action-adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg.

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Indiana State Museum

The Indiana State Museum is a museum located within White River State Park in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.

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Indigenous archaeology

Indigenous archaeology is a sub-discipline of western archaeological theory that seeks to engage and empower indigenous people in the preservation of their heritage and to correct perceived inequalities in modern archaeology.

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Indigenous Aryans

The Indigenous Aryans theory, also known as the Out of India Theory, proposes that the Indo-European languages, or at least the Indo-Aryan languages, originated within the Indian subcontinent, as an alternative to the established migration model which proposes the Pontic steppe as the area of origin of the Indo-European languages.

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Indigenous people of the Everglades region

The indigenous people of the Everglades region arrived in the Florida peninsula of what is now the United States approximately 14,000 to 15,000 years ago, probably following large game.

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Indigenous peoples in Brazil

Indigenous peoples in Brazil (povos indígenas no Brasil), or Indigenous Brazilians (indígenas brasileiros), comprise a large number of distinct ethnic groups who have inhabited what is now the country of Brazil since prior to the European contact around 1500.

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Indigenous peoples of the Americas

The indigenous peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian peoples of the Americas and their descendants. Although some indigenous peoples of the Americas were traditionally hunter-gatherers—and many, especially in the Amazon basin, still are—many groups practiced aquaculture and agriculture. The impact of their agricultural endowment to the world is a testament to their time and work in reshaping and cultivating the flora indigenous to the Americas. Although some societies depended heavily on agriculture, others practiced a mix of farming, hunting and gathering. In some regions the indigenous peoples created monumental architecture, large-scale organized cities, chiefdoms, states and empires. Many parts of the Americas are still populated by indigenous peoples; some countries have sizable populations, especially Belize, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Ecuador, Greenland, Guatemala, Guyana, Mexico, Panama and Peru. At least a thousand different indigenous languages are spoken in the Americas. Some, such as the Quechuan languages, Aymara, Guaraní, Mayan languages and Nahuatl, count their speakers in millions. Many also maintain aspects of indigenous cultural practices to varying degrees, including religion, social organization and subsistence practices. Like most cultures, over time, cultures specific to many indigenous peoples have evolved to incorporate traditional aspects but also cater to modern needs. Some indigenous peoples still live in relative isolation from Western culture, and a few are still counted as uncontacted peoples.

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Indigenous peoples of Yukon

The indigenous peoples of Yukon were the sole inhabitants of the Arctic coastal territories prior to arrival of Europeans.

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Indo-Aryan migration

Indo-Aryan migration models discuss scenarios around the theory of an origin from outside South Asia of Indo-Aryan peoples, an ascribed ethnolinguistic group that spoke Indo-Aryan languages, the predominant languages of North India.

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Indo-European migrations

Indo-European migrations were the migrations of pastoral peoples speaking the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), who departed from the Yamnaya and related cultures in the Pontic–Caspian steppe, starting at.

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Indo-Roman trade relations

Indo-Roman trade relations (see also the spice trade and incense road) was trade between the Indian subcontinent and the Roman Empire in Europe and the Mediterranean.

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Industrial archaeology

Industrial archaeology (IA) is the systematic study of material evidence associated with the industrial past.

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Industry (archaeology)

In the archaeology of the Stone Age, an industry or technocomplex is a typological classification of stone tools.

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Inez Scott Ryberg

Inez Ryberg (November 2, 1901 – September 1980) was an American classical archaeologist and academic, who specialized in Archaeology, Roman art and architecture.

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Infanticide

Infanticide (or infant homicide) is the intentional killing of infants.

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Infidel (video game)

Infidel is an interactive fiction computer game published by Infocom in 1983.

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Ingala Valley

The Ingala Valley (Ингальская долина) is an archaeological district in the area between the Tobol and Iset rivers.

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Ingombe Ilede

Ingombe Ilede is an archaeological site in Zambia, on a hill near the confluence of the Zambezi and Lusitu rivers, near the town of Siavonga close to the Kariba Dam.

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Inhumanoids

Inhumanoids is the title of an animated series and the name of a Hasbro toy property that were both released in 1986.

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Inishkeel

Inishkeel is a small island and a townland off the coast of County Donegal, Ireland.

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Innisfallen Island

Innisfallen or Inishfallen is an island in Lough Leane; one of the three Lakes of Killarney in County Kerry, Ireland.

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INS Darshak

INS Darshak (J21) is a hydrographic survey ship in the Indian Navy, under the Eastern Naval Command.

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Inside the Neolithic Mind

Inside the Neolithic Mind: Consciousness, Cosmos and the Realm of the Gods is a cognitive archaeological study of Neolithic religious beliefs in Europe co-written by the archaeologists David Lewis-Williams and David Pearce, both of the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire

IFAN (I.F.A.N., Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire or African Institute of Basic research) is a cultural and scientific institute in the nations of the former French West Africa.

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Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale

The Institut français d'archéologie orientale (or IFAO), also known as the French Institute for Oriental Archaeology in Cairo is a French research institute based in Cairo, Egypt, dedicated to the study of the archaeology, history and languages of the various periods of Egypt's civilisation.

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Institut Français de Recherche en Iran

The Institut Français de Recherche en Iran (Anjoman-e Irân-shenâsi-e Farânse) is an archeological and historical institute located in Tehran, which is part of the cultural wing of the French embassy.

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Institut national du patrimoine

French national institute of cultural heritage, called Institut national du patrimoine (Inp), is the only academy in France in charge of the training of both curators and conservators.

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Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Center for East Crete

The Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Center for East Crete (INSTAP-SCEC) is a research institution based at Pacheia Ammos in East Crete, Greece.

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Institute for Comparative Research in Human Culture

The Institute for Comparative Research in Human Culture (Instituttet for sammenlignende kulturforskning) is a humanities research institute based in Oslo, Norway.

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Institute for Environmental Solutions

Institute for Environmental Solutions (IES) is a non-profit research organization in Latvia that utilises airborne remote sensing technologies and creates multidisciplinary teams to design and develop innovative environmental solutions.

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Institute for Field Research

The Institute for Field Research (IFR) is a non profit organization established in 2011 by a group of academic archaeologists.

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Institute for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology Sarajevo

Institute for genetic engineering and biotechnology, also known as INGEB, is public Bosnian-Herzegovinian scientific institution, member Sarajevo University (UNSA), Affiliate center of International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology – ICGEB.

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Institute for Protection of Cultural Monuments and National Museum

Institute for Protection of Cultural Monuments and the National Museum (Завод за заштита на спомениците на културата и Народен музеј) is a scientific, research and cultural institution in Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia.

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Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations

The Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations (IHAC) is a graduate research institute on ancient history, ancient languages, and archaeology at the Northeast Normal University in Changchun, China (Jilin Province).

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Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography

The Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography or N.N. Miklukho-Maklai Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology (Институт этнологии и антропологии им.; abbreviated as ИЭА in Russian and IEA in English) is a Russian institute of research, specializing in ethnographic studies of cultural and physical anthropology.

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Institute of Archaeology (Oxford)

The Institute of Archaeology is an academic department of the University of Oxford devoted to the teaching and research of archaeology.

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Institute of Baltic Region History and Archaeology

Institute of Baltic Region History and Archaeology (Baltijos regiono istorijos ir archeologijos institutas, (BRIAI)) is the scholarly research subdivision of Klaipėda University.

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Institute of Culture Heritage, Tourism and Hospitality Management

The Institute of Cultural Heritage, Tourism and Hospitality Management (ICHTHM) was established at University of Swat in Pakistan with a view to prepare professionals in cultural heritage management, tourism and hospitality management, and archaeology.

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Institute of Native American Studies

The Institute of Native American Studies (INAS) was founded in 2004 at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, to provide programming, instruction, and research support in Native American Studies.

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Institute of Nautical Archaeology

The Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA) is the world’s oldest organization devoted to the study of humanity’s interaction with the sea through the practice of archaeology.

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Institute of Puerto Rican Culture

The Institute of Puerto Rican Culture (Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña), or ICP, for short, is an institution of the Government of Puerto Rico responsible for the establishment of the cultural policies required in order to study, preserve, promote, enrich, and diffuse the cultural values of Puerto Rico.

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Institute of Sindhology

Institute of Sindhology (سنڌولوجي) is one of the major resources on the history of Sindh.

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Instituto de Estudos Medievais

The Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM, Institute for Medieval Studies) is a centre for advanced research on medieval studies attached to the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences (FCSH) of Universidade Nova de Lisboa, in Portugal.

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Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia

The Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH, National Institute of Anthropology and History) is a Mexican federal government bureau established in 1939 to guarantee the research, preservation, protection, and promotion of the prehistoric, archaeological, anthropological, historical, and paleontological heritage of Mexico.

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Integrated Archaeological Database

The Integrated Archaeological Database system, or IADB for short, is an open-source web-based application designed to address the data management requirements throughout the lifespan of archaeological excavation projects, from initial excavation recording, through post-excavation analysis and research to eventual dissemination and archiving.

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Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage project

The Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage (IPinCH) Project is a seven-year international research initiative based at Simon Fraser University, in British Columbia, Canada.

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Intelligent Design (book)

Intelligent Design: The Bridge Between Science and Theology is a 1999 book by William A. Dembski, in which the author presents an argument in support of intelligent design.

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Intelligent design and science

The relationship between intelligent design and science has been a contentious one.

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Interior Plateau

The Interior Plateau comprises a large region of the Interior of British Columbia, and lies between the Cariboo and Monashee Mountains on the east, and the Hazelton Mountains, Coast Mountains and Cascade Range on the west.

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Intermediate Area

The Intermediate Area is an archaeological geographical area of the Americas that was defined in its clearest form by Gordon R. Willey in his 1971 book An Introduction to American Archaeology, Vol.

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International Center for East Asian Archaeology and Cultural History

The International Center for East Asian Archaeology and Cultural History (abbreviated ICEAACH, simplified Chinese: 东亚考古与文化历史国际研究中心; traditional Chinese: 東亞考古與文化歷史國際研究中心; pinyin: dōng yà kǎo gǔ yǔ wén huà lì shǐ guó jì yán jiū zhōng xīn) is an internationally recognized hub for trans-disciplinary research and public outreach in East Asian archaeology and cultural heritage.

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International Christian University

is a non-denominational private university located in Mitaka, Tokyo, Japan.

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International Finno-Ugric Students’ Conference

IFUSCO (International Finno-Ugric Students' Conference) is an annual international conference for and by the students of Finno-Ugric languages.

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International Journal of Historical Archaeology

The International Journal of Historical Archaeology is an academic journal devoted to the archaeology of historical sites.

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International Journal of South American Archaeology

The International Journal of South American Archaeology – IJSA is an eJournal listed by scholarly journal and one of the first fully peer-reviewed electronic journal for archaeology published by Syllaba Press.

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International Prize (Fyssen Foundation)

The International Prize (French: Prix International) of the Fyssen Foundation is a science award that has been given annually since 1980 to a scientist who has conducted distinguished research in the areas supported by the foundation such as ethology, palaeontology, archaeology, anthropology, psychology, epistemology, logic and the neurosciences.

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International Standard Bible Encyclopedia

The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia refers to two different revisions of a Bible encyclopedia.

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Internet Archaeology

Internet Archaeology is an international scholarly journal and one of the first fully peer-reviewed electronic journals for archaeology.

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Interracial marriage

Interracial marriage is a form of marriage outside a specific social group (exogamy) involving spouses who belong to different socially-defined races or racialized ethnicities.

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Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum

The Intersegmental General Education Transfer Curriculum (IGETC) is an educational plan for California community college students designed to facilitate transferring to a four-year public university.

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Intihuatana, Urubamba

Intihuatana (possibly from in the Quechua spelling Inti Watana or Intiwatana)Teofilo Laime Ajacopa, Diccionario Bilingüe Iskay simipi yuyayk'ancha, La Paz, 2007 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary) at the archaeological site of Machu Picchu (Machu Pikchu) is a notable ritual stone associated with the astronomic clock or calendar of the Inca in South America.

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Inuit culture

Inuit describes the various groups of indigenous peoples who live throughout Inuit Nunangat, that is the Inuvialuit Settlement Region of the Northwest Territories and Nunavut of Northern Canada, Nunavik in Quebec and Nunatsiavut in Labrador, as well as in Greenland.

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Invasion

An invasion is a military offensive in which large parts of combatants of one geopolitical entity aggressively enter territory controlled by another such entity, generally with the objective of either conquering; liberating or re-establishing control or authority over a territory; forcing the partition of a country; altering the established government or gaining concessions from said government; or a combination thereof.

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Inverted bell

The inverted bell is a metaphorical name for geometric shape that resembles a bell upside down.

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Ioannis Liritzis

Ioannis Liritzis (Greek: Ιωάννης Λυριντζής; born 2 November 1953) is professor of physics in archaeology (archaeometry) and his field of specialization is the application of natural sciences to archaeology and cultural heritage.

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Ioannis Svoronos

Ioannis Svoronos (Ιωάννης Σβορώνος; Mykonos, 15 April 1863 – Athens, 7 July 1922) was a Greek archaeologist and numismatist.

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Ion Horațiu Crișan

Ion Horaţiu Crişan (1928–1994) was a Romanian historian and archaeologist.

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Ion Niculiță

Ion Niculiţă (born 27 May 1939 in Zărneşti, Cahul District) is a Moldovan professor of archaeology, known for his contributions to the field of thracology.

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Ippenschied

Ippenschied is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ipswich Museum

Ipswich Museum is a registered museum of culture, history and natural heritage located on High Street (off Crown Street) in Ipswich, the County Town of the English county of Suffolk.

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Iqalugaarjuup Nunanga Territorial Park

Iqalugaarjuup Nunanga Territorial Park ("the land around the river of littles fishes," referring to the Arctic grayling that frequent the Meliadine River) is a park located northwest of Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, Canada.

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Iqbal Review

Iqbal Review (Punjabi, اقبال ریویو), is an academic journal dedicated to the work of Muhammad Iqbal.

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Iqrit

Iqrit (إقرت or إقرث, Iqrith), was a Palestinian Christian village, located northeast of Acre.

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Iraq ed-Dubb

Iraq ed-Dubb, or the Cave of the Bear, is an early Neolithic archeological site northwest of Ajlun in the Jordan Valley, in modern-day Jordan.

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Iraqi Transitional Government

The Iraqi Transitional Government was the government of Iraq from May 3, 2005, when it replaced the Iraqi Interim Government, until May 20, 2006, when it was replaced by the first permanent government.

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Irina Rusanova

Irina Petrovna Rusanova (22 April 1929 – 22 October 1998) was a Russian archaeologist and member of the Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

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Irish anniversary festivals

In the 1980s and 1990s, a number of areas in the Republic of Ireland held year-long festivals commemorating historic anniversaries.

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Irishtown Bend

Irishtown Bend is the name given to both a former Irish American neighborhood and a landform located on the Flats of the west bank of the Cuyahoga River in the city of Cleveland in the U.S. state of Ohio in the United States.

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Irit Ziffer

Dr.

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Irminsul

An Irminsul (Old Saxon, probably "great/mighty pillar" or "arising pillar") was a sacral pillar-like object attested as playing an important role in the Germanic paganism of the Saxon people.

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Iron Gates

The Iron Gates (Porțile de Fier, Đerdapska klisura, Железни врата, Eisernes Tor, Vaskapu) is a gorge on the river Danube.

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Iron Gates Region Museum

The Iron Gates Region Museum (Muzeul Regiunii Porţilor de Fier) is a museum in Drobeta-Turnu Severin, Romania.

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Iron pillar of Delhi

The iron pillar of Delhi is a kirti stambha (column of fame or victory column), originally erected and dedicated as dhvaja (banner) to Hindu deity lord Vishnu in 3rd to 4th century CE by king Chandragupta II, currently standing in the Qutb complex at Mehrauli in Delhi, India.

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Iron Range Historical Society

The Iron Range Historical Society is a historical society that operates a research library in McKinley, St. Louis County, Minnesota, United States.

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Irrigation in viticulture

Irrigation in viticulture is the process of applying extra water in the cultivation of grapevines.

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Irving Rouse

Benjamin Irving Rouse (August 29, 1913 – February 24, 2006) was an American archaeologist on the faculty of Yale University best known for his work in the Greater and Lesser Antilles of the Caribbean, especially in Haiti.

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Isaac Newton's occult studies

English physicist and mathematician Isaac Newton produced many works that would now be classified as occult studies.

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Isaac Schwartz

Isaac Iosifovich Schwartz (Исаак Иосифович Шварц; 13 May 1923 – 27 December 2009), also known as Isaak Shvarts, was a Soviet composer.

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Isabelle Raubitschek

Isabelle Kelly Raubitschek (September 2, 1914 - 1988) was an American art historian, archaeologist, and professor of art at Stanford University.

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Isca Augusta

Isca, variously specified as Isca Augusta or Isca Silurum, was the site of a Roman legionary fortress and settlement or vicus, the remains of which lie beneath parts of the present-day suburban village of Caerleon in the north of the city of Newport in South Wales.

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Isfahan

Isfahan (Esfahān), historically also rendered in English as Ispahan, Sepahan, Esfahan or Hispahan, is the capital of Isfahan Province in Iran, located about south of Tehran.

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Ishag Jafarzadeh

Ishag Mammadrza oglu Jafarzadeh (İshaq Məmmədrza oğlu Cəfərzadə, August 14, 1895, Ganja–January 5, 1982, Baku) was one of the pioneers of Azerbaijan archaeology and ethnography.

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Ishi Wilderness

The Ishi Wilderness is a 41,339 acre (167 km2) wilderness area located on the Lassen National Forest in the Shasta Cascade foothills of northern California, United States.

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ISIL beheading incidents

Beginning in 2014, a number of people from various countries were beheaded by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a radical Sunni Islamist group operating in Iraq and parts of Syria.

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ISIS neutron source

ISIS Neutron and Muon Source is a pulsed neutron and muon source.

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Isis Tomb, Vulci

The Isis Tomb is the name of a richly endowed Etruscan tomb that was found at the Polledrara Cemetery, Vulci in the early nineteenth century.

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Iskul Bukol 20 Years After (Ungasis and Escaleras Adventure)

Iskul Bukol 20 Years After (Ungasis and Escaleras Adventure) is a Philippine comedy movie starring actors Tito Sotto, Vic Sotto, and Joey de Leon.

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Islamic University of Gaza

The Islamic University of Gaza (الجامعة الإسلامية بغزة), also known as IUG, IU Gaza and The University of Gaza, is an independent Palestinian university established in 1978 in Gaza City, then within the jurisdiction of Israeli Military rule.

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Island 35 Mastodon

The Island 35 Mastodon was discovered on Island No. 35 of the Mississippi River in Tipton County, Tennessee, United States.

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Island Farm

Island Farm was a Prisoner of War Camp (Camp 198) on the outskirts of the town of Bridgend, South Wales.

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Isleham

Isleham is a small village and civil parish in the English county of Cambridgeshire.

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Ismailiyya Palace

The Ismailiyya Palace (İsmailiyyə Sarayı) is a historical building that currently serves as the Presidium of the Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan.

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Isoscapes

Isoscapes are spatially explicit predictions of elemental isotope ratios (δ) that are produced by executing process-level models of elemental isotope fractionation or distribution in a Geographic Information System (GIS).

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Isotope analysis

Isotope analysis is the identification of isotopic signature, the abundance of certain stable isotopes and chemical elements within organic and inorganic compounds.

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Isotopic signature

An isotopic signature (also isotopic fingerprint) is a ratio of non-radiogenic 'stable isotopes', stable radiogenic isotopes, or unstable radioactive isotopes of particular elements in an investigated material.

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Isparta Museum

Isparta Museum is a museum in Isparta, Turkey.

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Israel

Israel, officially the State of Israel, is a country in the Middle East, on the southeastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea and the northern shore of the Red Sea.

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Israel College of the Bible

Israel College of the Bible (המכללה למקרא) is the only Hebrew speaking accredited Bible college in Israel.

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Israel Exploration Journal

The Israel Exploration Journal is a biannual academic journal which has been published by the Israel Exploration Society since 1950.

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Israel Exploration Society

The Israel Exploration Society (IES) (Hebrew:החברה לחקירת ארץ ישראל ועתיקותיה - Hakhevra Lekhakirat Eretz Yisrael Va'atikoteha), originally the Jewish Palestine Exploration Society, is a society devoted to historical, geographical and archaeological research of the Land of Israel.

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Israel Finkelstein

Israel Finkelstein (ישראל פינקלשטיין, born March 29, 1949) is an Israeli archaeologist and academic.

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Israel Roll

Israel Roll (1937 - June 2010) was an Israeli archaeologist and academic.

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Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ

The Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ (ICGJC, also Israelite Church-God & Jesus), formerly known as the Israeli Church of Universal Practical Knowledge, is an organization of Black Hebrew Israelites (i.e. they teach that African Americans, not Jews, are the real descendants of the Hebrews of the Bible and God's chosen people).

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Israelites

The Israelites (בני ישראל Bnei Yisra'el) were a confederation of Iron Age Semitic-speaking tribes of the ancient Near East, who inhabited a part of Canaan during the tribal and monarchic periods.

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Isthmo-Colombian Area

The Isthmo-Colombian Area is defined as a cultural area encompassing those territories occupied predominantly by speakers of the Chibchan languages at the time of European contact.

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Istorichesky Vestnik

Istorichesky Vestnik (Историческій Вѣстникъ, Исторический вестник, History Herald) was a Russian monthly historical and literary magazine published in Saint Petersburg in 1880-1917.

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Italic languages

The Italic languages are a subfamily of the Indo-European language family, originally spoken by Italic peoples.

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Italo Gismondi

Italo Gismondi (August 12, 1887 in Rome, Italy – December 2, 1974 in Rome) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Italo Insolera

Italo Insolera (Turin, February 7, 1929 – Rome, August 27, 2012) was an Italian architect, urban and land planner, and historian.

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Ittoqqortoormiit

Ittoqqortoormiit (East Greenlandic) or Illoqqortoormiut (West Greenlandic), formerly known as Scoresbysund, is a settlement in the Sermersooq municipality in eastern Greenland.

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Iulon Gagoshidze

Iulon Gagoshidze (იულონ გაგოშიძე) (born 17 July 1935) is a Georgian archaeologist, scholar and politician who served as the State Minister for Diaspora Issues in the Government of Georgia from November 2007 to December 2009, when he was moved to lead the recently created Archeological Research Center at the President's Administration.

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Ivan Karayotov

Ivan Dimitrov Karayotov (Иван Димитров Карайотов) is a Bulgarian archaeologist and historian who studied ancient and medieval archaeology and history.

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Ivan Martynov

Ivan Mikhailovich Martinov (7 October 1821, at Kazan, Russia – 26 April 1894, at Cannes, France), was a Russian Jesuit priest.

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Ivan Meshchaninov

Ivan Meshchaninov (24 November 1883 – 16 January 1967) was a Soviet linguist and ethnographer.

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Ivan Sakharov

Ivan Petrovich Sakharov (Иван Петрович Сахаров, September 10, 1807, Tula, Russian Empire, — September 5, 1863, Valdai region, Tver Governorate, Russian Empire) was a Russian folklorist, ethnographer, archeologist and paleographer.

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Ivan Van Sertima

Ivan Gladstone Van Sertima (26 January 1935 – 25 May 2009) was a Guyanese-born associate professor of Africana Studies at Rutgers University in the United States.

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Ivan Venedikov

Ivan Yordanov Venedikov (Иван Йорданов Венедиков) was a Bulgarian archaeologist, historian, thracologist and philologist who studied Thracian and medieval history, archaeology, art and culture; Bulgarian cultural and artistic heritage.

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Ivan Zabelin

Ivan Yegorovich Zabelin (Иван Егорович Забелин; 29 September 1820, Tver – 13 January 1908, Moscow) was a Russian historian and archaeologist with a Slavophile bent who helped establish the National History Museum on Red Square and presided over this institution until 1906.

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Ivo Sanader

Ivo Sanader (born on 8 June 1953) is a Croatian politician who served as the Prime Minister of Croatia from 2003 to 2009.

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Ivor Noël Hume

Ivor Noël Hume, OBE (September 30, 1927 – February 4, 2017) was a British-born archaeologist in the United States.

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Izapa

Izapa is a very large pre-Columbian archaeological site located in the Mexican state of Chiapas; it is best known for its occupation during the Late Formative period.

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Iziko South African Museum

The Iziko South African Museum is a South African national museum located in Cape Town.

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Izumi Shimada

Izumi Shimada is a Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale (SIUC) and 2007 Outstanding Scholar with research interests in the archaeology of complex pre-Hispanic cultures in the Andes, the technology and organization of craft production, mortuary analysis, experimental archaeology, the role of ideology and organized religion in cultural developments, and ecology-culture interaction.

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Izvir, Brežice

Izvir is a small settlement in the Municipality of Brežice in eastern Slovenia.

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J&J Hunt Submerged Archaeological Site

J&J Hunt Site (8JE740) is an inundated prehistoric archaeological site located 6 km off the coast of northwestern Florida.

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J. C. Coleman

John (Jack) Cristopher Coleman (died 20 April 1971) was a respected Irish geographer, archaeologist, speleologist and mountaineer.

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J. C. Harrington

Jean Carl Harrington (October 25, 1901 – April 19, 1998) — known as J. C. Harrington, or "Pinky" to his friends — was an American archaeologist best known for his work at Jamestown, Virginia and his contributions to the methodology of historical archaeology.

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J. Desmond Clark

John Desmond Clark (more commonly J. Desmond Clark, April 10, 1916 – February 14, 2002) was a British archaeologist noted particularly for his work on prehistoric Africa.

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J. Eric S. Thompson

Sir John Eric Sidney Thompson, KBE (31 December 1898 – 9 September 1975) was a leading English Mesoamerican archaeologist, ethnohistorian, and epigrapher.

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J. F. Blakiston

John Francis Blakiston CIE (21 March 1882 – 8 January 1965) was a British Indian archaeologist who served as Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) from 1935 to 1937.

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J. P. Mallory

James Patrick Mallory (born 1945) is an Irish-American archaeologist and Indo-Europeanist.

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J. Patrick Greene

J.

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J. Richard Steffy

John Richard Steffy (May 1, 1924 Lancaster, Pennsylvania – November 29, 2007 Bryan, Texas) was an American nautical archaeologist.

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J. Wilfrid Jackson

John Wilfrid Jackson (15 June 1880 – 1978) was a British conchologist, archaeologist and geologist.

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J.M. Stuart Station

J.M. Stuart Station was a 2.3-gigawatt (2,318 MW) coal power plant located east of Aberdeen, Ohio in Adams County, Ohio.

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Jabalpur

Jabalpur (formerly Jubbulpore) is a tier 2 city in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India.

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Jabir Raza

Syed Jabir Raza (born 1 August 1955) is an Indian historian, and a researcher in the history stream.

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Jabuka

Jabuka (Cyrillic: Јабука) is a village situated in the Pančevo municipality, in the South Banat District, Vojvodina province, Serbia.

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Jacinto Jijón y Caamaño

Jacinto Jijón y Caamaño was an Ecuadorian historian and politician, born in Quito on December 11, 1890 to Don Manuel Jijón Larrea and Doña Dolores Caamaño y Almada.

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Jack Carlson (rowing)

Jack Carlson (born May 22, 1987) is an American rower, author, and archaeologist.

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Jack Churchill (character)

Jack 'Church' Churchill is a fictional character, appearing in Mark Chadbourn's trilogies The Age of Misrule, The Dark Age and The Kingdom of the Serpent.

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Jack Drake

Jack Drake is a fictional character from DC Comics books, specifically the Batman titles.

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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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Jack Hranicky

Jack Hranicky is a Registered Professional Archaeologist (RPA).

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Jack McDevitt

Jack McDevitt (born April 14, 1935) is an American science fiction author whose novels frequently deal with attempts to make contact with alien races, and with archaeology or xenoarchaeology.

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Jack Ogden (jewellery historian)

Jack Ogden, FSA, FGA, is a distinguished jewellery historian with a particular interest in the development of materials and technology.

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Jackie Chan Adventures (video game)

The Jackie Chan Adventures video game series is based upon the animated series Jackie Chan Adventures.

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Jacob K. Javits Fellowship

The Jacob K. Javits Fellowship program formerly provided fellowships to students of superior academic ability—selected on the basis of demonstrated achievement, financial need, and exceptional promise—to undertake study at the doctoral and Master of Fine Arts level in selected fields of arts, humanities, and social sciences.

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Jacob L. Wright

Jacob L. Wright is an author, lecturer, and professor of religion specializing in the Hebrew Bible and Old Testament.

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Jacob Spon

Jacob Spon (or Jacques; in English dictionaries given as James) (Lyon 1647, Lyon – 25 December 1685 Vevey, Switzerland) was a French doctor and archaeologist, was a pioneer in the exploration of the monuments of Greece and a scholar of international reputation in the developing "Republic of Letters".

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Jacques Boucher de Crèvecœur de Perthes

Jacques Boucher de Crèvecœur de Perthes (10 September 1788 – 5 August 1868), sometimes referred to as Boucher de Perthes, was a French archaeologist and antiquary notable for his discovery, in about 1830, of flint tools in the gravels of the Somme valley.

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Jacques Cauvin

Professor Jacques Cauvin (1930 – 26 December 2001) was a French archaeologist who specialised in the prehistory of the Levant and Near East.

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Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac

Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac (5 October 1778 – 9 May 1867) was a French archaeologist, elder brother of Jean-François Champollion (decipherer of the Rosetta Stone).

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Jacques Tixier

Jacques Tixier Jacques Tixier (1 January 1925 – 3 April 2018) was a French archaeologist and prehistorian notable for his work on prehistory in Qatar, Lebanon, and North Africa.

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Jacques Viger (1787–1858)

Jacques Viger (May 7, 1787 – December 12, 1858) was an antiquarian, archaeologist, and the first mayor of the Canadian city of Montreal, Quebec.

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Jacquetta Hawkes

Jacquetta Hawkes (5 August 1910 – 18 March 1996) was a British archaeologist and writer.

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Jacqui Wood

Jacqui Wood (born 4 January 1950) is a British archaeologist and writer, specializing in the daily life of prehistoric Europeans.

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Jade use in Mesoamerica

The use of jade in Mesoamerica for symbolic and ideological ritual was highly influenced by its rarity and value among pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures, such as the Olmec, the Maya, and the various groups in the Valley of Mexico.

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Jaffa

Jaffa, in Hebrew Yafo, or in Arabic Yaffa (יפו,; يَافَا, also called Japho or Joppa), the southern and oldest part of Tel Aviv-Yafo, is an ancient port city in Israel.

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Jagadish Chandra Bose

Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose, CSI, CIE, FRS (30 November 1858 – 23 November 1937), also spelled Jagdish and Jagadis, was a polymath, physicist, biologist, biophysicist, botanist and archaeologist, and an early writer of science fiction.

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Jago Cooper

Jago Cooper (born 1 June 1977) is a British archaeologist and the Curator of the Americas at the British Museum whose career has focused on the archaeology of South America and the Caribbean, in particular the historic effects of climate change on island communities.

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Jaguar (Archie Comics)

The Jaguar is a superhero first published in 1961 by Archie Comics.

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Jahangirnagar University

Jahangirnagar University (জাহাঙ্গীরনগর বিশ্ববিদ্যালয় Jahangirnôgôr Bishwôbidyalôy, University Acronym: জাবি or JU) is a public university in Bangladesh, based in Savar Upazila, Dhaka.

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Jaime Awe

Jaime José Awe is a Belizean archaeologist who specializes in the ancient Maya,Awe, Jaime J. (2011).

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Jaime Reyes

Jaime Reyes is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Jakten på Odin

The Search for Odin (Norwegian: Jakten på Odin) is the project title of Thor Heyerdahl's last series of archaeological excavations, which took place in Azov (Tanais) in Russia.

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Jale İnan

Jale İnan (1 February 1914 – 26 February 2001) was a Turkish archaeologist, and she is considered to be the first Turkish woman to have been active in the discipline.

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Jameh mosque of Golpayegan

The Jameh mosque of Golpayegan is one of the important mosques of the Seljukid era and one of the large mosques in Iran.

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James B. Pritchard

James Bennett Pritchard (October 4, 1909 – January 1, 1997) was an American archeologist whose work explicated the interrelationships of the religions of ancient Palestine, Canaan, Egypt, Assyria, and Babylon.

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James Backhouse (botanist, 1825–1890)

James Backhouse (1825–1890) was an English botanist, archaeologist, and geologist.

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James Bennett Griffin

James Bennett Griffin (also known as Jimmy Griffin) (January 12, 1905 – May 17, 1997) was an American archaeologist.

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James Buckman

James Buckman (November 20, 1814 – November 23, 1884) was a British pharmaceutical chemist, professor, museum curator, botanist, geologist, archaeologist, author and farmer.

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James C. Bradford

James Chapin Bradford (born 1945 in Michigan) is a professor of history at Texas A&M University and a specialist in American maritime, naval, and military history in the early national period of American History.

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James Chatters

James C. Chatters (born March 20, 1949) is an American forensic anthropologist, archaeologist, and paleontologist.

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James City County, Virginia

James City County is a county located in the Commonwealth of Virginia.

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James D. Strauss

James Dean Strauss (born July 3, 1929; died March 19, 2014) is an American theologian who was professor of theology and philosophy at Lincoln Christian Seminary from 1967-1994.

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James Deetz

James Deetz (February 8, 1930 – November 25, 2000) was an American anthropologist, often known as one of the fathers of historical archaeology.

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James Graves (antiquarian)

James Graves (1815 – 1886) was an Irish clergyman, antiquary and archaeologist of the Victorian era.

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James Gurney

James Gurney (born June 14, 1958) is an artist and author best known for his illustrated book series Dinotopia, which is presented in the form of a 19th-century explorer’s journal from an island utopia cohabited by humans and dinosaurs.

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James Henry Breasted

James Henry Breasted (August 27, 1865 – December 2, 1935) was an American archaeologist, Egyptologist, and historian.

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James K. Hampson

:For the English footballer, see Jimmy Hampson James Kelly Hampson (1877 – 8 October 1956) was the archaeologist to excavate and preserve the artifacts from the Nodena Site and owner of the Hampson Plantation in Wilson, Arkansas.

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James L. Swauger

James L. Swauger (November 1, 1913-December 18, 2005) was an archaeologist known for his work on the petroglyphs of the Ohio River valley of the United States.

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James Leakey

James Leakey (1775–1866) was an English landscape and portrait artist.

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James Leslie Starkey

James Leslie Starkey (3 January 1895 – 10 January 1938) was a noted British archaeologist of the ancient Near East and Palestine in the period before the Second World War.

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James M. Adovasio

James M. Adovasio (born 1944) is an American archaeologist and one of the foremost experts in perishable artifacts (such as basketry and textiles).

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James McBride (pioneer)

James McBride (1788–1859) was a prominent pioneer statesman in Butler County, Ohio.

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James Mellaart

James Mellaart FBA (14 November 1925 – 29 July 2012) was a British archaeologist and author who is noted for his discovery of the Neolithic settlement of Çatalhöyük in Turkey.

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James Millingen

James Millingen (18 January 1774 – 1 October 1845), was a Dutch-English archaeologist, now known as a numismatist.

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James N. Hill

James Newlin Hill (1934–1997) was a prominent processualist archaeologist (a student of Lewis Binford).

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James O. Mills

James Olan Mills, also known as Jay Mills, is an American archaeologist primarily known for his work in paleopathology and the excavations at Nekhen (Hierakonpolis), the capital of Upper Egypt in the late 4th millennium, ancient Egypt's Protodynastic Period.

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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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James the Brother of Jesus (book)

James the Brother of Jesus: The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of early Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls is a 1997 book by American archaeologist and Biblical scholar Robert Eisenman.

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James Theodore Bent

James Theodore Bent (30 March 1852 – 5 May 1897) was an English explorer, archaeologist and author.

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Jamestown Rediscovery

Jamestown Rediscovery is an archaeological project of Preservation Virginia (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities) investigating the remains of the original settlement at Jamestown established in the Virginia Colony beginning on May 14, 1607.

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Jamestown Settlement

Jamestown Settlement is a living history museum operated by the Commonwealth of Virginia, created in 1957 as Jamestown Festival Park for the 350th anniversary celebration.

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Jamestown, Saint Helena

Jamestown is the capital of the British Overseas Territory of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, located on the island of Saint Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean.

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Jamestown, Virginia

The Jamestown settlement in the Colony of Virginia was the first permanent English settlement in the Americas.

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Jamshoro

Jamshoro (ڄام شورو), (جامشورو), is a city and capital of Jamshoro District, Sindh, Pakistan.

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Jan Cvitkovič

Jan Cvitkovič (born 1966) is a Slovenian film director, screenwriter and actor.

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Jan Parandowski

Jan Parandowski (11 May 1895 – 26 September 1978) was a Polish writer, essayist, and translator.

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Jan Peder Lamm

Jan Peder Lamm (born 27 October 1935), is a Swedish archaeologist.

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Jan Simek

Jan F. Simek (born April 15, 1953) is an American archaeologist and educator who was the interim president of the University of Tennessee system from 2009–2010.

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Janabiyah

Janabiyah (Arabic:الجنبية) is a village situated in the north-west of Bahrain, close to the Gulf of Bahrain.

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Janakpur, Nepal

Janakpur (जनकपुर) is the headquarters of Dhanusa District in Nepal.

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Jane Dieulafoy

Jane Dieulafoy (29 June 1851 – 25 May 1916) was a French archaeologist, explorer, novelist and journalist.

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Jane Ellen Harrison

Jane Ellen Harrison (9 September 1850 – 15 April 1928) was a British classical scholar, linguist.

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Jane Grenville

Jane Clare Grenville, (born 17 June 1958) is a British archaeologist and academic, specialising in the archaeology of medieval buildings.

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Jane McGregor

Jane McGregor (born 1983) is a Canadian actress, best known for her roles in Slap Her... She's French (2002), Flower & Garnet (2002), and That Beautiful Somewhere (2006), as well as her recurring role on the television series Robson Arms.

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Jane McIntosh

Jane McIntosh is a Scottish archaeologist and author.

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Jane Renfrew

Jane Renfrew, Lady Renfrew of Kaimsthorn is a British archaeologist and paleoethnobotanist noted for her studies on the use of plants in prehistory, the origin and development of agriculture, food and wine in antiquity, and the origin of the vine and wine in the Mediterranean.

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Janet D. Spector

Janet D. Spector (October 21, 1944 – September 13, 2011) was an American archaeologist.

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Janowiec Castle

Janowiec Castle - a Renaissance castle built in between 1508–1526, on a steep Vistulan hillside in Janowiec (14,5 km south of Puławy), Lublin Voivodeship, in Poland.

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Jao Tsung-I

Jao Tsung-I or Rao Zongyi (9 August 1917 – 6 February 2018) was a Hong Kong-based Chinese sinologist, calligrapher, historian and painter.

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Japanese Archaeological Association

The (JAA) was established in 1948 and is a nationwide organization concerned with the archaeology of Japan and the preservation of its Cultural Properties.

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Japanese people

are a nation and an ethnic group that is native to Japan and makes up 98.5% of the total population of that country.

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Jaroslav Malina (anthropologist)

Jaroslav Malina (born 11 April 1945, in Dolní Bučice near Čáslav, Czech Republic) is a Czech archaeologist, anthropologist, publishing editor, head of the Department (Institute) of Anthropology of the Faculty of Science of Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic, and founder and head of Universitas (Masarykiana) Foundation.

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Jason Sanford

Jason Sanford is an American science fiction author best known for his short story writing.

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Jastrebarsko

Jastrebarsko (Jaska), colloquially known as Jaska, is a town in Zagreb County, Croatia.

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Jatari Indian Folk Association

The Jatari Indian Folk Association is a Hungarian musical group aims to explore and collect the folk traditions such as folk music, folk and sacral dances, national costume, folk instruments, legends, folk tales, Catholic liturgical and Gregorian tunes of Andean cultures of South America.

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Jawor

Jawor (Jauer) is a town in south-western Poland with 24,347 inhabitants (2006).

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Jay Estate

The 23 acre Jay Estate (also known as the Jay Property), with the 1838 Peter Augustus Jay House at its center is the keystone of the Boston Post Road Historic District, a National Historic Landmark District (NHL) created in 1993.

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Jay Gluck

Jay Fred Gluck (January 11, 1927 – December 19, 2000) was an American archaeologist and historian of Persian art and a Japanophile.

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Jay Haviser

Jay Bryant Haviser, Jr. (born November 21, 1955, Bartow, Florida) is an American-born archaeologist and anthropologist who has conducted archaeological fieldwork in St. Martin and Curacao.

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Ján Kollár

Ján Kollár (29 July 1793 in Mošovce (Mosóc), Kingdom of Hungary, Habsburg Monarchy, now Slovakia – 24 January 1852 in Vienna, Austrian Empire) was a Slovak writer (mainly poet), archaeologist, scientist, politician, and main ideologist of Pan-Slavism.

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Jérémie-Jacques Oberlin

Jérémie-Jacques Oberlin (8 August 1735 – 10 October 1806) was an Alsatian philologist and archaeologist.

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Jérôme Pichon

Baron Jérome-Frédéric Pichon (3 December 1812 – 26 August 1896) was a 19th-century French bibliographer and bibliophile.

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Józef Kostrzewski

Józef Kostrzewski (February 25, 1885 – October 19, 1969) was a Polish archaeologist.

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József Hampel

József Hampel (Hampel József; November 10, 1849 – March 25, 1913) was a Hungarian archaeologist and member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

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Jbaa

Jbaa (Arabic: جباع; Syriac: ܓܒܐܥ; Phoenician: 𐤂𐤁𐤀𐤏), is a town in Lebanon located about 22km (14 miles) from Sidon and 64km (40 miles) from Beirut.

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Jean Baptiste François Pitra

Cardinal Pitra in 1871. Jean-Baptiste-François Pitra (1 August 1812 – 9 February 1889) was a French Catholic cardinal, archaeologist and theologian.

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Jean Baptiste Seroux d'Agincourt

Jean Baptiste Louis George Seroux D'Agincourt (5 April 1730 – 24 September 1814) was a French archaeologist and historian.

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Jean Bousquet

Jean Bousquet (9 May 1912, Bordeaux – 1 April 1996, aged 83) was a 20th-century French Hellenist.

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Jean Clédat

Jean Clédat (7 May 1871 – 29 July 1943) was a French Egyptologist, archaeologist and philologist.

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Jean Clottes

Jean Clottes is a prominent French prehistorian.

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Jean Emile Humbert

Jean Emile Humbert (23 July 1771 in The Hague – 20 February 1839 in Livorno) was a Dutch lieutenant-colonel who can be credited with rediscovering ancient Carthage.

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Jean Lebeuf

Jean Lebeuf (7 March 1687 – 10 April 1760) was a French historian.

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Jean Leclant

Jean Leclant (8 August 1920 – 16 September 2011) was a renowned Egyptologist who was an Honorary Professor at the College of France, Permanent Secretary of the Academy of Inscriptions and Letters of the Institut de France, and Honorary Secretary of the.

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Jean Lobstein

Jean Georges Chrétien Frédéric Martin Lobstein (German spelling: Johann Friedrich Georg Christian Martin Lobstein) (8 May 1777 – 7 March 1835) was a German-born, French pathologist and surgeon who was a native of Giessen.

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Jean Perrot

Jean Perrot (1920 – December 24, 2012) was a French archaeologist who specialised in the late prehistory of the Middle East and Near East.

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Jean Pouilloux

Professor Jean Pouilloux, born October 31, 1917 in Le Vert (Deux-Sèvres), France and died at Pimontin (Rhone) May 23, 1996 was a French hellenist archaeologist.

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Jean-Antoine Letronne

Jean Antoine Letronne (25 January 1787 – 14 December 1848) was a French archaeologist.

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Jean-Baptiste Gail

Jean-Baptiste Gail (1755–1829) was a French Hellenist scholar, member of the Institut de France (French Institute).

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Jean-Baptiste Greppo

Jean-Baptiste Greppo (17 May 1712, in Lyon – 17 June 1767, in Saint-Paul) was a French canon known for his archaeological studies associated with the ancient walls (fortifications) of Lyon.

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Jean-Baptiste Kiéthéga

Jean-Baptiste Kiéthéga is an archeologist and historian from Upper Volta, currently Burkina Faso.

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Jean-Claude Gardin

Jean-Claude Gardin (3 April 1925 - 8 April 2013) was a French archaeologist who is recognized as being one of the founders of archaeological computing.

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Jean-François Jarrige

Jean-François Jarrige (August 5, 1940, Lourdes – November 18, 2014, Paris) was a French archaeologist specializing in South Asian archaeology and Sindhology.

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Jean-François Séguier

Jean-François Séguier (25 November 1703 – 1 September 1784) was a French archaeologist, epigraphist, astronomer and botanist from Nîmes.

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Jean-Gabriel-Honoré Greppo

Jean-Gabriel-Honoré Greppo (3 September 1788, in Lyon – 22 September 1863, in Belley) was a French canon remembered for his research in the fields of archaeology and Oriental studies.

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Jean-Hippolyte Michon

Jean-Hippolyte Michon (21 November 1806 – 8 May 1881) was a French priest and archaeologist and the founder of graphology.

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Jean-Jacques Barthélemy

Jean-Jacques Barthélemy (20 January 1716 – 30 April 1795) was a French writer and numismatist.

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Jean-Jacques Bourassé

Jean-Jacques Bourassé (22 December 1813, Ste.-Maure (Indre-et-Loire), France—4 October 1872, Tours) was a French Roman Catholic priest, archaeologist and historian.

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Jean-Jacques Favier

Jean-Jacques Favier (Born April 13, 1949) is a French engineer and a former CNES astronaut who flew aboard the STS-78 NASA Space Shuttle mission.

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Jean-Luc Carbuccia

Jean-Luc Carbuccia (1808 – 17 June 1854) and died at Gallipoli, was a French general and archaeologist.

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Jean-Luc Picard

Jean-Luc Picard is a fictional Starfleet officer in the Star Trek franchise, most often seen as the Captain of the starship USS ''Enterprise''-D. He appears in the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG), the feature films Star Trek Generations (1994), Star Trek: First Contact (1996), Star Trek: Insurrection (1998), and Star Trek: Nemesis (2002), and numerous associated media.

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Jean-Yves Empereur

Jean-Yves Empereur (born 1952) is a French archeologist.

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Jean-Yves Marin

Jean-Yves Marin is an archeologist, mediavelist and chief curator of French heritage.

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Jeanette Zwingenberger

Jeanette Zwingenberger (born 1962 in Memmingen) is a Paris-based independent art curator.

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Jeanne Burbank

Jeanne Beadle Burbank (May 8, 1915 – March 2, 2002) worked for 25 years at the United States Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), studying the materials and components of lead-acid and silver-zinc batteries used in submarines.

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Jeannine Auboyer

Jeannine Auboyer (1912 - 1990) was a French curator of the Musée Guimet (1965–80) in Paris, who made several archaeological expeditions to India and Cambodia and wrote numerous French titles on history.

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Jeanny Canby

Jeanny Vorys Canby (July 14, 1929 – November 18, 2007) was an American archaeologist and scholar of the Ancient Near East.

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Jebel al-Madhbah

Jebel al-Madhbah (جبل المذبح) is a mountain at Petra, in present-day Jordan, which a number of scholars have proposed as the Biblical Mount Sinai, beginning with Ditlef Nielsen in 1927.

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Jebel Barkal

Jebel Barkal or Gebel Barkal (جبل بركل) is a very small mountain located some 400 km north of Khartoum, in Karima town in Northern State in Sudan, on a large bend of the Nile River, in the region called Nubia.

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Jebel Moya

Jebel Moya is an archaeological site in the southern Gezira Plain, Sudan.

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Jebrael Nokandeh

Jebrael Nokandeh (Persian: جبرئیل نوکنده) is an Iranian archaeologist.

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Jedward's Big Adventure

Jedward's Big Adventure is a children's television programme airing on CBBC.

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Jeff Hawke

Jeff Hawke was a British science fiction comic strip created by Sydney Jordan.

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Jeffers Petroglyphs

The Jeffers Petroglyphs site is an outcrop in southwestern Minnesota with pre-contact Native American petroglyphs.

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Jeffrey C. Wynn

Dr Jeffrey C. Wynn (aka Jeff Wynn), is a research geophysicist with the United States Geological Survey (USGS).

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Jeffrey Goodman

Jeffrey Goodman is an independent American archaeologist with training in geology and archaeology.

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Jeffrey R. Chadwick

Jeffrey R. Chadwick is a professional archaeologist and university professor.

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Jeffrey Royal

Jeffrey G. Royal (born 1964) is an American archaeologist active in the Mediterranean area.

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Jeffries Wyman

Jeffries Wyman (August 11, 1814 – September 4, 1874) was an American naturalist and anatomist, born in Chelmsford, Massachusetts.

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Jem Poster

Jem Poster (born 1949) is a noted contemporary British poet and novelist.

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Jennifer Moody

Jennifer Alice Moody is an American archaeologist, and research fellow at University of Texas at Austin.

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Jenny Jones, Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb

Jennifer Helen Jones, Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb FSA (born 23 December 1949) is an English Eurosceptic politician and prominent member of the Green Party of England and Wales.

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Jens Jacob Asmussen Worsaae

Jens Jacob Asmussen Worsaae (14 March 1821 – 15 August 1885) was a Danish archaeologist, historian and politician, who was the second director of the National Museum of Denmark (1865–1874).

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Jens Munk Island

Jens Munk Island is one of the Canadian arctic islands in Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada.

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Jeong Ji-hae

Jeong Ji-hae is acknowledged as the first person to conduct an archaeological excavation in Korea (Joseon) in 1748.

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Jerald T. Milanich

Jerald T. Milanich is an American anthropologist and archaeologist, specializing in Native American culture in Florida.

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Jericho

Jericho (יְרִיחוֹ; أريحا) is a city in the Palestinian Territories and is located near the Jordan River in the West Bank.

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Jericho Governorate

The Jericho Governorate (محافظة أريحا; נפת יריחו) is one of 16 Governorates of Palestine.

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Jernej Kopitar

Jernej Bartol Kopitar (21 August 1780 – 11 August 1844) was a Slovene linguist and philologist working in Vienna.

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Jerome

Jerome (Eusebius Sophronius Hieronymus; Εὐσέβιος Σωφρόνιος Ἱερώνυμος; c. 27 March 347 – 30 September 420) was a priest, confessor, theologian, and historian.

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Jersey

Jersey (Jèrriais: Jèrri), officially the Bailiwick of Jersey (Bailliage de Jersey; Jèrriais: Bailliage dé Jèrri), is a Crown dependency located near the coast of Normandy, France.

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Jerusalem (2013 film)

Jerusalem is a 2013 documentary film about the ancient city of Jerusalem.

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Jerusalem in Christianity

For Christians, Jerusalem's role in first-century Christianity, during the ministry of Jesus and the Apostolic Age, as recorded in the New Testament, gives it great importance, in addition to its role in the Old Testament, the Hebrew Bible.

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Jesús Arango Cano

Jesús Arango Cano (La Tebaida, Colombia, 21 June 1915 - Armenia, 9 January 2015) was a Colombian economist, diplomat, anthropologist, archaeologist and writer.

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Jesús Salgado

Jesús Salgado (February 5, 1873 – February 14, 1920) was a revolutionary leader and soldier in the Mexican Revolution, sometimes called the "Guerrero Zapata".

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Jesmonite

Jesmonite is a composite material used in fine arts, crafts, and construction.

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Jesse D. Jennings

Jesse David Jennings (1909–1997) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist and founding director of the Natural History Museum of Utah.

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Jesse Walter Fewkes

Jesse Walter Fewkes (November 14, 1850 – 1930) was an American anthropologist, archaeologist, writer and naturalist.

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Jesus of Montreal

Jesus of Montreal (Jésus de Montréal) is a 1989 French Canadian comedy-drama film written and directed by Denys Arcand, and starring Lothaire Bluteau, Catherine Wilkening and Johanne-Marie Tremblay.

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Jesus Seminar

The Jesus Seminar was a group of about 50 critical Biblical scholars and 100 laymen founded in 1985 by Robert Funk that originated under the auspices of the Westar Institute.

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Jettenbach, Rhineland-Palatinate

Jettenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district which belongs to the federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate in Germany.

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Jewellery

Jewellery (British English) or jewelry (American English)see American and British spelling differences consists of small decorative items worn for personal adornment, such as brooches, rings, necklaces, earrings, pendants, bracelets, and cufflinks.

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Jewish Christian

Jewish Christians, also Hebrew Christians or Judeo-Christians, are the original members of the Jewish movement that later became Christianity.

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Jewish ethnic divisions

Jewish ethnic divisions refers to a number of distinctive communities within the world's ethnically Jewish population.

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Jewish Museum of Maryland

The Jewish Museum of Maryland is located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States.

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Jewish revolt against Heraclius

The Jewish revolt against Heraclius was part of the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628 and is considered the last serious Jewish attempt for gaining autonomy in the Land of Israel prior to modern times.

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Jewish studies

Jewish studies (or Judaic studies) is an academic discipline centered on the study of Jews and Judaism.

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Jews

Jews (יְהוּדִים ISO 259-3, Israeli pronunciation) or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group and a nation, originating from the Israelites Israelite origins and kingdom: "The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites""The people of the Kingdom of Israel and the ethnic and religious group known as the Jewish people that descended from them have been subjected to a number of forced migrations in their history" and Hebrews of the Ancient Near East.

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Jiahu

Jiahu was the site of a Neolithic settlement based in the central plain of ancient China, near the Yellow River.

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Jill Braithwaite

Jill Braithwaite, Lady Braithwaite (15 September 1937 - 10 November 2008) was a British diplomat and archaeologist.

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Jill Cook

Jill Cook is a British museum curator who is the acting Keeper of the Department of Britain, Europe and Prehistory at the British Museum.

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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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Jim Eyles

James Roy Eyles (10 January 1926 – 12 November 2004) was a New Zealand archaeologist.

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Jim G. Shaffer

Jim G. Shaffer (born 1944) is an American archaeologist and professor of Anthropology at Case Western Reserve University.

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Jinvijay

Muni Jinvijayji (1888–1976) was a scholar of orientalism, archeology, indology and Jainism from India.

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Jiwaji University

Jiwaji University (JU) is a public affiliating university in Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, India.

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Jizi

Jizi or Qizi (Gija or Kija in Korean) was a semi-legendary Chinese sage who is said to have ruled Gija Joseon in the 11th century BCE.

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Jo Anne Van Tilburg

Jo Anne Van Tilburg is an American archaeologist best known for her research on the statues of Easter Island (Rapa Nui).

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Joachim Werner (archaeologist)

Joachim Werner (born 23 December 1909, Berlin; d. 9 January 1994, Munich) was a German archaeologist who was especially concerned with the archaeology of the Early Middle Ages in Germany.

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Joan Beck

Joan Margret Beck, BEM, (1918-2014) was an Australian archaeologist and fencer.

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Joan du Plat Taylor

Joan Mabel Frederica Du Plat Taylor (26 June 1906 – 1983) was born in Glasgow, Scotland on 26 June 1906 and, despite no formal training, became one of the first maritime archaeologists.

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Joan E. Taylor

Joan Taylor is a historian of Jesus, the Bible, early Christianity, the Dead Sea Scrolls and Second Temple Judaism, with special expertise in archaeology, women and gender, and the work of Philo of Alexandria.

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Joan Gero

Joan M. Gero (1944–2016) was an American archaeologist and pioneer of feminist archaeology.

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Joan Oates

Joan Louise Oates, FBA (née Lines; born 6 May 1928) is an American archaeologist and academic, specialising in the Ancient Near East.

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Joan P Alcock

Joan Pilsbury Alcock BA MA DipEd PhD, FSA is an archeologist and historian and an Honorary Fellow of London South Bank University.

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Joaquim Pedro de Oliveira Martins

Joaquim Pedro de Oliveira Martins (30 April 1845 – 24 August 1894) was a Portuguese politician and social scientist.

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Joara

Joara was a large Native American settlement, a regional chiefdom of the Mississippian culture, located in what is now Burke County, North Carolina, about 300 miles in the interior in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

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João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos, 1st Count of Ameal

João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos (his surname also graphed Aires de Campos in contemporary Portuguese), 1st Count of Ameal, GCC, CvNSC, OOPA (Coimbra, February 5, 1847 – July 13, 1920) was a Portuguese politician and antiquarian, best known as a great art collector, maecenas and bibliophile.

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Jocelyn Toynbee

Jocelyn Mary Catherine Toynbee, (3 March 1897 in Paddington, London – 31 December 1985 in OxfordMalcolm Todd,, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 4 July 2008) was an English archaeologist and art historian.

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Jochen Gerz

Jochen Gerz (born 4 April 1940 in Berlin, Germany) is a German conceptual artist who has spent most of his life in France (1966 to 2007).

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Joconde

Joconde is the central database created in 1975 and now available online, maintained by the French Ministry of Culture, for objects in the collections of the main French public and private museums listed as Musées de France, according to article L. 441-1 of the Code du patrimoine.

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Jodi Magness

Jodi Magness (born September 19, 1956) is the Kenan Distinguished Professor for Teaching Excellence in Early Judaism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Joe Alaskey

Joseph Francis "Joe" Alaskey III (April 17, 1952 – February 3, 2016) was an American stand-up comedian, actor, voice artist, and impressionist.

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Joe Ben Wheat

Dr.

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Joe Caldwell (archaeologist)

Joseph (Joe) Ralston Caldwell (June 14, 1916 – December 23, 1973) was an American archaeologist was born in Cleveland, Ohio.

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Johan Beyen

Johan Willem Beyen (2 May 1897 in Utrecht – 29 April 1976 in 's-Gravenhage) was a Dutch banker, civil servant, politician, and diplomat.

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Johan Gunnar Andersson

Johan Gunnar Andersson (3 July 1874 – 29 October 1960)"Andersson, Johan Gunnar" in The New Encyclopædia Britannica.

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Johan Kamminga

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

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Johan Reinhard

Johan Reinhard (born December 13, 1943), is an Explorer-in-Residence at the National Geographic Society.

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Johan Sebastian Welhaven

Johan Sebastian Cammermeyer Welhaven (22 December 1807 – 21 October 1873) was a Norwegian author, poet, critic and art theorist.

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Johan Zoëga

Johan Zoëga (born 7 October 1742 in Ravsted, Schleswig, died 29 December 1788 (20 Dec.)) was a Danish entomologist and botanist.

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Johann Andreas Wagner

Johann Andreas Wagner (21 March 1797 – 17 December 1861) was a German palaeontologist, zoologist and archaeologist who wrote several important works on palaeontology.

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Johann Arnold Kanne

Johann Arnold Kanne (31 May 1773, Detmold – 17 December 1824, Erlangen) was a German philologist and linguist.

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Johann August Kaupert

Johann August Kaupert (9 May 1822 – 11 February 1899) was a German topographer and cartographer born in Kassel.

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Johann Daniel Major

Johann Daniel Major (16 August 1634, Breslau – 26 July 1693, Stockholm) was a German professor of theoretical medicine, naturalist, collector and the founder of museology.

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Johann Georg Abicht

Johann Georg Abicht (21 March 1672 – 5 June 1740) was a German Lutheran theologian, born at Königsee, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen.

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Johann Georg Keyßler

Johann Georg Keyßler (or Keyssler when the letter ß is avoided; 1693–1743) was a German polymath, known for his travel writings and his archaeology.

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Johann Gottfried Schweighäuser

Johann Gottfried Schweighäuser (Jean Geoffroy Schweighaeuser) (2 January 1776, Strasbourg –14 March 1844) was a French philologist and archaeologist.

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Johann Gustav Gottlieb Büsching

Johann Gustav Gottlieb Büsching (19 September 1783 – 4 May 1829) was a German antiquary.

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Johann Heinrich Bartels

Johann Heinrich Bartels (20 May 1761 – 1 February 1850) was a scholar from Hamburg who became a city senator in 1798.

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Johann Joachim Winckelmann

Johann Joachim Winckelmann (9 December 1717 – 8 June 1768) was a German art historian and archaeologist.

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Johann Michael Ackner

Johann Michael Ackner (January 25, 1782 – August 12, 1862) was a Transylvanian archaeologist and nature researcher.

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Johann Nepomuk Locherer

Johann Nepomuk Locherer (August 21, 1773 – February 26, 1837) was a German Catholic theologian born in Freiburg im Breisgau.

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Johann Philipp Siebenkees

Johann Philipp Siebenkees (4 October 1759 – 25 June 1796) was a German philosopher.

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Johann Schweighäuser

Johann Schweighäuser (Jean Geoffroy Schweighaeuser; June 25, 1742 – January 19, 1830), was a French classical scholar.

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Johanna Mestorf

Johanna Mestorf (17 April 1828, Bad Bramstedt, Duchy of Holstein – 20 July 1909, Kiel) was a German prehistoric archaeologist, the first female museum director in the Kingdom of Prussia and usually said to be the first female professor in Germany.

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Johannes Boehlau

Johannes Boehlau (30 September 1861, Halle an der Saale – 24 September 1941, Göttingen) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Johannes Brøndsted

Johannes Brøndsted, (born 5 October 1890 - 16 November 1965) was a Danish archaeologist and prehistorian.

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Johannes Ilberg

Johannes Ilberg (10 July 1860, Magdeburg – 20 August 1930, Leipzig) was a German educator and classical philologist who was the author of numerous works on ancient Greek medicine.

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Johannes Overbeck

Johannes Adolph Overbeck (March 27, 1826 – November 8, 1895) was a German archaeologist and art historian.

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Johfiyeh

Johfiyeh (جُحفية), also spelled Johfiyah, Juhfiyah or Juhfiyeh, is a historical village in northern Jordan, located 80 kilometers north of the capital Amman and about 7.5 km southwest of the city Irbid.

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John Abercromby, 5th Baron Abercromby

John Abercromby, 5th Baron Abercromby (15 January 1841 – 7 October 1924) was a Scottish soldier and archaeologist.

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John Albert Bullbrook

John Albert Bullbrook (1882–1967; born in the Medway area in what was then Kent in South-East England) was an author, archaeologist and archaeological historian, who went to Trinidad in 1913 as a petroleum geologist.

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John Aubrey

John Aubrey (12 March 1626 – 7 June 1697) was an English antiquary, natural philosopher and writer.

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John Beazley

Sir John Davidson Beazley, (13 September 1885 – 6 May 1970) was a British classical archaeologist and art historian, known for his classification of Attic vases by artistic style.

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John Bellairs

John Anthony Bellairs (January 17, 1938 – March 8, 1991) was an American author, best known for his fantasy novel The Face in the Frost and many gothic mystery novels for young adults featuring the characters Lewis Barnavelt, Rose Rita Pottinger, Anthony Monday, and Johnny Dixon.

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John Bellows

John Thomas Bellows (18 January 1831 – 5 May 1902) was a polymath, printer and lexicographer, originally from Cornwall in southwest England.

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John Bennet (archaeologist)

Donald John Logan Bennet,, known as John Bennet, is a British archaeologist, classicist, and academic, who specialises in the Aegean civilisations.

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John Blair (historian)

William John Blair, (born 4 March 1955) is an English historian, archaeologist, and academic, who specialises in Anglo-Saxon England.

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John Boardman (art historian)

Sir John Boardman, (born 20 August 1927) is a classical art historian and archaeologist, "Britain's most distinguished historian of ancient Greek art.".

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John Bright (biblical scholar)

John Bright (September 25, 1908 – March 26, 1995) was an American biblical scholar, the author of several books including the influential A History of Israel (1959), currently in its fourth edition (2000).

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John Broster

John Bertram Broster (born 17 May 1945) is an American archaeologist formerly serving as the Prehistoric Archeological Supervisor at the Tennessee Division of Archaeology, Department of Environment and Conservation.

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John Bryan Ward-Perkins

John Bryan Ward-Perkins, CMG, CBE, FBA (3 February 1912, Bromley, Kent, United Kingdom – 28 May 1981, Cirencester, United Kingdom) was a British Classical architectural historian and archaeologist, and director of the British School at Rome.

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John C. Trever

John C. Trever (November 26, 1916 - April 29, 2006, California) was a Biblical scholar and archaeologist, who was involved in the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls.

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John Caruana

Giovanni Caruana (1866–1923) was a Maltese lawyer and minor philosopher.

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John Conyers (apothecary)

John Conyers (c. 1633–1694) was an English apothecary and pioneering archaeologist.

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John D. Cooper Archaeological and Paleontological Center

The Dr.

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John Daniel Rogers

John Daniel Rogers, Ph.D. (born October 30, 1954) is a Curator of Archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at the National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC.

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John Darnton

John Darnton (born November 20, 1941 in New York City) is an American journalist who wrote for the New York Times.

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John Davies Evans

John Davies Evans OBE (22 January 1925 – 4 July 2011) was an English archaeologist and academic, renowned for his research into the prehistory of the Mediterranean, and especially the prehistoric cultures of Malta.

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John Deere House and Shop

The John Deere House and Shop is located in the unincorporated village of Grand Detour, Illinois, near the Lee County city of Dixon.

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John Disney (archaeologist)

John Disney (29 May 1779 – 6 May 1857) was an English barrister and archaeologist.

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John Dominic Crossan

John Dominic Crossan (born February 17, 1934Official website,, Retrieved April 2, 2013.) is an Irish-American New Testament scholar, historian of early Christianity, and former Catholic priest who has produced both scholarly and popular works.

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John E. Clark

John Edward Clark (born 1952) is an American archaeologist and academic researcher of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures.

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John Evans (archaeologist)

Sir John Evans, KCB, FRS (17 November 1823 – 31 May 1908) was an English archaeologist and geologist.

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John F. Baddeley

John Frederick Baddeley (July 1854 – Oxford, 16 February 1940) was a British traveller, scholar and journalist, best known by his works on Russia and the Caucasus region.

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John F. Lacey

John Fletcher Lacey (May 30, 1841 – September 29, 1913) was an eight-term Republican United States congressman from Iowa's 6th congressional district.

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John Garstang

John Garstang (5 May 1876 – 12 September 1956) was a British archaeologist of the ancient Near East, especially Anatolia and the southern Levant.

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John Gater

John Gater is a British archaeological geophysicist, who has regularly featured on Time Team – the Channel 4 archaeological television series – since 1993.

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John Gillespie Magee Jr.

John Gillespie Magee Jr. (9 June 1922 – 11 December 1941) was a World War 2 Anglo-American Royal Canadian Air Force fighter pilot and poet, who wrote the poem High Flight.

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John Henry Haynes

John Henry Haynes (27 January 1849 – 29 June 1910) was an American traveller, archaeologist, and photographer, best known for his archaeological work at the first two American archaeological excavations in the Mediterranean and Mesopotamia at Nippur and Assos.

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John Henry Middleton

John Henry Middleton (5 October 1846 – 10 June 1896) was an archaeologist and a museum director.

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John Hewitt (herpetologist)

John Hewitt (23 December 1880 – 4 August 1961) was a South African zoologist and archaeologist of British origin.

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John Hind (bishop in Fukien)

John Hind was a missionary bishop of the Anglican Church in Fukien.

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John Hopkinson (priest)

John Henry Hopkinson was Archdeacon of Westmorland from 1931 until 1944.

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John Howard Payne

John Howard Payne (June 9, 1791 – April 10, 1852) was an American actor, poet, playwright, and author who had most of his theatrical career and success in London.

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John Howell (politician)

John Michael Howell (born 27 July 1955) is a British Conservative politician.

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John Howland Rowe

John Howland Rowe (June 10, 1918 – May 1, 2004) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist known for his extensive research on Peru, especially on the Inca civilization.

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John Hyacinth Power

John Hyacinth Power was the second Director of the McGregor Museum in Kimberley, South Africa.

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John Izard Middleton

John Izard Middleton (1785–1849) was an American archeologist and artist.

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John Kirk (archaeologist)

John Lamplugh Kirk BA MB M.R.C.S PhD FSA (18691940) was a British Doctor, amateur archaeologist and founder of York Castle Museum in York, North Yorkshire.

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John L. Sorenson

John L. Sorenson (born April 8, 1924) is an emeritus professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University (BYU) and the author of An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon as well as many other books and articles on the Book of Mormon and archaeology.

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John Le Patourel

John Herbert Le Patourel FBA (29 July 1909 – 22 July 1981) was a historian from Guernsey.

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John Leland (antiquary)

John Leland or Leyland (13 September, – 18 April 1552) was an English poet and antiquary.

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John Leland Champe

John Leland Champe (1895–1978) was an academic and archaeologist especially influential in the area of Great Plains archaeology.

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John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury

John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury, 4th Baronet, (30 April 183428 May 1913), known as Sir John Lubbock, 4th Baronet from 1865 until 1900, was an English banker, Liberal politician, philanthropist, scientist and polymath.

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John M. Allegro

John Marco Allegro (17 February 1923 – 17 February 1988) was an English archaeologist and Dead Sea Scrolls scholar.

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John MacEnery

Father John MacEnery (27 November 1797 – 18 February 1841) was a Roman Catholic priest from Limerick, Ireland and early archaeologist who came to Devon as Chaplain to the Cary family at Torre Abbey in 1822.

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John Manley (archaeologist)

John Manley (born 1950) is a British archaeologist and author.

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John Mann Goggin

John Mann Goggin (May 27, 1916, Chicago – May 4, 1963, Gainesville) was a cultural anthropologist in the southwest, southeast, Mexico, and Caribbean, primarily focusing on the ethnology, cultural history, and typology of artifacts from archaeological sites.

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John Marshall (archaeologist)

Sir John Hubert Marshall, CIE, FBA (19 March 1876, Chester, England – 17 August 1958, Guildford, England) was the Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India from 1902 to 1928.

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John Mercer (archaeologist)

John Barry Mercer (1934 –July 1982) was a British archaeologist, author and weaver.

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John Miliades

John Miliades (Ioannis Miliades, Γιάννης Μηλιάδης, Ιωάννης Μηλιάδης) (1895-1975) was a Greek archaeologist most known for his excavations of the south side of the Acropolis of Athens.

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John Morris (historian)

John Robert Morris (8 June 1913 – 1 June 1977) was an English historian who specialised in the study of the institutions of the Roman Empire and the history of Sub-Roman Britain.

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John O. Westwood

John Obadiah Westwood (22 December 1805 – 2 January 1893) was an English entomologist and archaeologist also noted for his artistic talents.

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John Ochsendorf

John Ochsendorf (born 1974) is an educator, structural engineer, and historian of construction; he is a professor in the Department of Architecture and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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John Otis Brew

John Otis Brew, born March 28, 1906, was an American Southwest archaeologist that not only conducted extensive archaeological research, but was also a director at the Peabody Museum at Harvard University.

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John P. Rogan

John P. Rogan conducted the first archaeological excavations on the Etowah Indian Mounds near Cartersville, Georgia for the Smithsonian Institution working under Cyrus Thomas during the early 1880s.

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John Parkington (archaeology)

John Parkington is an Emeritus professor in archaeology and hunter-gatherers, paleoenvironmental reconstruction and human ecology, prehistoric art, coastal archaeology.

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John Pendlebury

John Devitt Stringfellow Pendlebury (12 October 1904 – 22 May 1941) was a British archaeologist who worked for British intelligence during World War II.

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John Percival (TV producer)

John Percival (1937-2005), was a British television producer and documentary maker.

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John Pickard (academic)

John Pickard was an American professor of archaeology, art history, and Greek at the University of Missouri.

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John Pull

John Henry Pull (25 June 1899 – 10 November 1960) was an unlikely archaeological hero.

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John Robert Mortimer

John Robert Mortimer (15 June 1825 – 19 August 1911) was an English corn-merchant and archaeologist who lived in Driffield, East Riding of Yorkshire.

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John Robert Sitlington Sterrett

John Robert Sitlington Sterrett was an American classical scholar and archeologist.

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John Romilly Allen

John Romilly Allen FSA FSA (Scot.) (9 June 1847 – 5 July 1907) was a British archaeologist.

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John Ronald Lidster

John Ronald "Ronnie" Lidster (1916–2008)Boughey, K. 2013.

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John Sands (journalist)

John Sands (1826–1900) of Ormiston was a Scottish freelance journalist and artist who also had an interest in archaeology and folk customs, especially the way of life on Scottish islands.

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John Savage Bolles

John Savage Bolles (June 25, 1905 – March 5, 1983) was an American architect.

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John Skinner (archaeologist)

The Rev. John Skinner (1772–1839) was a parish vicar and amateur antiquarian and archaeologist operating mainly in the area of Bath and the villages of northern Somerset in the early nineteenth century.

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John Solecki

John Solecki is a U.S. official for the UNHCR, working in Quetta, Pakistan.

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John Storey (politician)

John Storey (15 May 1869 – 5 October 1921) was an Australian politician who was Premier of New South Wales from 12 April 1920 until his sudden death in Sydney.

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John Templeton Foundation

The John Templeton Foundation (Templeton Foundation) is a philanthropic organization with a spiritual or religious inclination that funds inter-disciplinary research about human purpose and ultimate reality.

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John Thurnam

John Thurnam (28 December 1810 – 24 September 1873) was an English psychiatrist, archaeologist, and ethnologist.

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John W. Griffin (archaeologist)

John Wallace Griffin (November 8, 1919, Connersville, Indiana – September 3, 1993) was the State Archaeologist of Florida, the Director of the St.

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John W. Olsen

John W. Olsen, Ph.D., is an American archaeologist and paleoanthropologist specializing in the early Stone Age prehistory and Pleistocene paleoecology of eastern Eurasia.

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John Wells Foster

John Wells Foster (March 4, 1815 – June 29, 1873) was an American geologist and archaeologist.

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John Wesley Gilbert

John Wesley Gilbert (July 6, 1864 – November 18, 1923) was the first African-American archaeologist, the first graduate of Paine College, the first African-American professor of that school, and the first African-American to receive a master's degree from Brown University.

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John Whitbourn

John Whitbourn (born 1958) is an English author of novels and short stories focusing on alternative histories set in a 'Catholic' universe.

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John William Godward

John William Godward (9 August 1861 – 13 December 1922) was an English painter from the end of the Neo-Classicist era.

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John Wymer

Dr John James Wymer, (5 March 1928 – 10 February 2006) was a British archaeologist and one of the leading experts on the Palaeolithic period.

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Johnshaven

Johnshaven is a coastal village along the North Sea located in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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Johnson's Island

Johnson's Island is a island in Sandusky Bay, located on the coast of Lake Erie, from the city of Sandusky, Ohio.

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Jole Bovio Marconi

Jole Bovio Marconi (Rome, January 21, 1897 – Palermo, April 14, 1986) was an important archaeologist who graduated with a degree in the topography of ancient Rome from the Sapienza University of Rome.

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Jon Winroth

Jon Winroth Broneer (born November 13, 1935 in Athens, Greece; died July 15, 2006 in Tours, France) was an American wine critic who lived and worked in France.

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Jonathan M. Hall

Jonathan Mark Hall is Professor of Greek History at the University of Chicago.

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Jonathan Mark Kenoyer

Jonathan Mark Kenoyer (born May 28, 1952, in Shillong, India) is an American archaeologist and George F. Dales Jr.

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Jonathan Piel

Jonathan Piel (born 23 November 1938) is an American science journalist and editor.

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Jonathan Rosand

Jonathan Rosand is an American neurologist, clinician-scientist and Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School.

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Jonny Quest (TV series)

Jonny Quest (also known as The Adventures of Jonny Quest) is an American animated science fiction adventure television series about a boy who accompanies his scientist father on extraordinary adventures.

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Jordan Archaeological Museum

The Jordan Archaeological Museum is located in the Amman Citadel of Amman, Jordan.

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Jordan Tourism Development Project

The first USAID funded Jordan Tourism Development Project ran for three years (2005–2008) providing technical assistance, training and other services to help Jordan implement its National Tourism Strategy designed to double tourism receipts by 2010.

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Jorge de Alarcão

Jorge de Alarcão (born 3 November 1934 in Coimbra, Portugal) is a portuguese archaeologist.

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Jorge R. Acosta

Jorge R. Acosta (1904–5 March 1975) was a Mexican archaeologist who worked on numerous major archaeological sites in Mesoamerica, including Chichen Itza, Teotihuacán, Oaxaca, Palenque, Monte Albán and Tula.

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José Cruxent

José Maria Cruxent (January 16, 1911 – February 23, 2005) was a professional archaeologist considered to be the "Father of Scientific Archaeology" in Venezuela.

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José Gerson da Cunha

José Gerson da Cunha (2 February 1844 – 3 August 1900) was a Goan physician who achieved international renown as an orientalist, historian, linguist and numismatist.

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José Leandro Montalvo Guenard

José Leandro Montalvo Guenard (1885 – 1950) was a Puerto Rican physician, inventor, anthropologist and historian.

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José Leite de Vasconcelos

José Leite de Vasconcelos Cardoso Pereira de Melo (7 July 1858 – 17 May 1941) was a Portuguese ethnographer, archaeologist and prolific author who wrote extensively on Portuguese philology and prehistory.

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José María Soler García

José María Soler García was a Spanish archaeologist, historian, researcher and folklorist.

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José Miguel Ramírez Aliaga

José Miguel Ramírez Aliaga is a Chilean archaeologist.

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José Oliver

José R. Oliver is a Puerto Rican/Catalan archaeologist who specialises in the archaeology of the Caribbean and northern South America.

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José Ramos Muñoz

José Ramos Muñoz is a Spanish archaeologist and professor of prehistory at the University of Cádiz and director of the Revista Atlántica Mediterránica de Prehistoria y Arqueología Social.

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Josef Keil

Josef Keil (13 October 1878 – 13 December 1963) was an Austrian historian, epigrapher and an archaeologist.

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Josef Ladislav Píč

Josef Ladislav Píč (January 19, 1847 in Mšeno near Mělník – December 19, 1911 in Prague) was Czech archaeologist and paleontologist, one of founders of modern Czech archaeology.

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Josef Neuwirth

Josef Neuwirth (5 June 1855, Neugarten – 25 April 1934, Vienna) was an Austrian art historian and architect.

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Josef Szombathy

Josef Szombathy born Szombathy József (11 June 1853 – 9 November 1943) was a Austro-Hungarian archaeologist; he was present when the Venus of Willendorf was discovered in 1908.

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Josef Vojtěch Hellich

Josef Vojtěch Hellich (17 April 1807, Choltice - 22 January 1880, Prague) was a Czech painter and archaeologist; known mainly for religious works and historical scenes.

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Josef W. Wegner

Josef William Wegner (born October 1967) is an American Egyptologist, archaeologist and Associate Professor in Egyptology at the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations of the University of Pennsylvania, where he obtained his PhD degree in Egyptology.

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Joseph Allegranza

Joseph Allegranza (16 October 1715 – 18 December 1785) was a Milanese Dominican who won distinction as a historian, archaeologist, and antiquary.

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Joseph Anselm Feuerbach

Joseph Anselm Feuerbach (9 September 1798 – 8 September 1851) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.

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Joseph Étienne Gautier

Joseph Étienne Gautier (6 September 1861, Oullins – 10 February 1924, Paris) was a French archaeologist.

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Joseph Beal Steere

Joseph Beal Steere (9 February 1842 – 7 December 1940) was an American ornithologist.

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Joseph Calasanza von Arneth

Joseph Calasanza, Ritter von Arneth (12 August 1791 – 31 October 1863) was an Austrian numismatist and archæologist, born at Leopoldschlag, Upper Austria.

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Joseph E. Ibberson Conservation Area

Joseph E. Ibberson Conservation Area is a Pennsylvania state park in Middle Paxton and Wayne Townships, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Joseph Emanuel Fischer von Erlach

Joseph Emanuel Fischer von Erlach, also Fischer von Erlach the younger (13 September 1693 in Vienna – 29 June 1742 in Vienna) was an Austrian architect of the Baroque, Rococo and Baroque classicism.

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Joseph George Cumming

Joseph George Cumming, MA Cantab., (15 February 1812 – 21 December 1868) was an English geologist and archaeologist.

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Joseph Heine

Joseph (von) Heine (28 November 1803 – 4 November 1877) was a German physician and a high civil servant in the Bavarian health service in the Rheinkreis.

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Joseph Maina Mungai

Joseph Maina Mungai (born in Kenya, 4 April 1932; died 13 August 2003) was the first African to become Dean of the School of Medicine at the University of Nairobi.

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Joseph Mullooly

Joseph Mullooly, (19 March 1812 – 25 June 1880) was an Irish Dominican Roman Catholic priest and archaeologist from Lehery, Lanesborough, County Longford, Ireland.

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Joseph Opala

Joseph A. Opala (born August 4, 1950) is an American historian noted for establishing the "Gullah Connection," the historical links between the indigenous people of the West African nation of Sierra Leone and the Gullah people of the Low Country region of South Carolina and Georgia in the United States.

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Joseph Prestwich

Sir Joseph Prestwich, FRS (12 March 1812 – 23 June 1896) was a British geologist and businessman, known as an expert on the Tertiary Period and for having confirmed the findings of Boucher de Perthes of ancient flint tools in the Somme valley gravel beds.

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Joseph Reinach

Joseph Reinach (30 September 1856 – 18 April 1921) was a French author and politician.

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Joseph Sinel

Joseph Sinel (December 13, 1844 in St Helier, Jersey – April 2, 1929) was a naturalist and archaeologist.

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Joseph Toynbee

Joseph Toynbee FRS (30 December 1815 – 7 July 1866) was an English otologist, whose career was dedicated to pathological and anatomical studies of the ear.

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Joseph V. Noble

Joseph V. Noble (1920–2007) was an American museum administrator, antiquities collector, and self-trained ceramic archaeologist.

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Joseph Whitaker (ornithologist)

Joseph Isaac Spadafora Whitaker (19 March 1850 in Palermo – 3 November 1936 in Rome) was a Sicilian-English ornithologist, archaeologist and sportsman.

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Josephine Flood

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

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Josephine Powell

Josephine Powell (15May 191919January 2007) was an American photographer, traveler, and a collector of Anatolian ethnographic objects and textiles.

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Josephus

Titus Flavius Josephus (Φλάβιος Ἰώσηπος; 37 – 100), born Yosef ben Matityahu (יוסף בן מתתיהו, Yosef ben Matityahu; Ἰώσηπος Ματθίου παῖς), was a first-century Romano-Jewish scholar, historian and hagiographer, who was born in Jerusalem—then part of Roman Judea—to a father of priestly descent and a mother who claimed royal ancestry.

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Josh Bernstein

Josh Bernstein (born February 24, 1971) is an American explorer, author, survival expert, anthropologist, and TV host best known as the host of Digging for the Truth.

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Josh McDowell

Joslin "Josh" McDowell (born August 17, 1939) is a Christian apologist, evangelist, and writer.

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Joshua Pollard

Joshua Pollard FSA is a British archaeologist who is a Reader at the University of Southampton.

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Josiah Priest

Josiah Priest (1788–1861) was an American nonfiction writer of the early 19th century.

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Josiah's Bay plantation

The Josiah's Bay plantation is an old plantation house on Tortola in the British Virgin Islands (BVI) which has been restored from ruins.

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Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World

The Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is an interdisciplinary center for research and teaching of archaeology, particularly archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and the Near East, at Brown University.

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Journal of Ancient History

The Journal of Ancient History (Russian: "Вестник древней истории") is a Russian bulletin founded in 1937.

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Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

The Journal of Anthropological Archaeology is a peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of archaeology.

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Journal of Archaeological Science

The Journal of Archaeological Science is a peer-reviewed academic journal that covers "the development and application of scientific techniques and methodologies to all areas of archaeology".

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Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology

The Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology is a leading regional source of scholarly information on the ethnography, archaeology, linguistics, and Native American history of the Western United States created by Harry Lawton.

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Journal of Egyptian Archaeology

The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology is an annual peer-reviewed academic journal covering research and reviews of recent books of importance to Egyptology.

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Journal of Hindu Studies

The Journal of Hindu Studies is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal established in 2008.

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Journal of Human Evolution

The Journal of Human Evolution is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal in the field of evolution, specializing in human and primate evolution.

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Journal of Indigenous Studies

The Journal of Indigenous Studies (French: La Revue des Études Indigènes) was a multilingual, biannual, peer-reviewed academic journal.

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Journal of Indo-European Studies

The Journal of Indo-European Studies is a peer-reviewed academic journal of Indo-European studies, founded in 1973 by Roger Pearson, who had previously founded the National Socialist organization Northern League.

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Journal of Material Culture

Journal of Material Culture is a peer-reviewed academic journal that publishes papers in the fields of Cultural Studies and Anthropology.

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Journal of Near Eastern Studies

The Journal of Near Eastern Studies (JNES) is an academic journal published by the University of Chicago Press, covering research on the ancient and medieval civilisations of the Near East, including their archaeology, art, history, literature, linguistics, religion, law, and science.

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Journal of Roman Archaeology

The Journal of Roman Archaeology is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering the archaeology of the Roman empire.

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Journal of Social Archaeology

The Journal of Social Archaeology is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal that covers the field of archaeology, in particular with regard to social interpretations of the past.

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Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt

The Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt (JARCE) is an academic journal published by the American Research Center in Egypt.

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Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association

The Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association is an annual peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Australian Early Medieval Association.

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Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute

The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.

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Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society

The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society is an academic journal which publishes articles on the history, archaeology, literature, language, religion and art of South Asia, the Middle East (together with North Africa and Ethiopia), Central Asia, East Asia and South-East Asia.

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Joyce Marcus

Joyce Marcus is a Latin American archaeologist and professor in the Department of Anthropology, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

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Joyce Tyldesley

Joyce Ann Tyldesley (born 25 February 1960) is a British archaeologist and Egyptologist, academic, writer and broadcaster.

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Joyce White

Joyce C. White, PhD is an American archaeologist, an adjunct associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania, and executive director of the new Institute for Southeast Asian Archaeology.

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Juan Bautista Ambrosetti

Juan Bautista Ambrosetti (August 22, 1865May 28, 1917) was an Argentine archaeologist, ethnographer and naturalist who helped pioneer anthropology in his country.

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Juan Manuel Abras

Juan Manuel Abras Contel (February 1, 1975) is a Swedish-born classical music composer, conductor and musicologist of European origin (Catalan and Galician on his father's side and Basque, Italian and French on his mother's side) and European and Argentine citizenship.

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Juan Martín Cueva

Juan Martín Cueva Armijos (born October 9, 1966 in Quito, Ecuador) is an Ecuadorian documentary film director and the director of the Filmfestival "Cero Latitud" in Quito.

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Judge Holden

Judge Holden is purportedly a historical person, a murderer who partnered with John Joel Glanton as a professional scalphunter in the mid-19th century.

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Judith Herrin

Judith Herrin (born 1942) is a British archaeologist and academic of Late Antiquity.

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Judith Sealy

Judith Sealy is a Professor and South Africa Research Chairs Initiative Research Chair in Archaeology and Paleoenvironmental Studies and director of the Stable Light Isotope Lab in the Department of Archaeology at University of Cape Town.

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Jules Barthoux

Jules Barthoux or Jules Couyat-Barthoux (1881-1965) was a French geologist and archaeologist born in 1881.

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Jules Desnoyers

Jules Pierre François Stanislaus Desnoyers (8 October 18001 September 1887) was a French geologist and archaeologist.

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Jules Hudson

Julian "Jules" Hudson (born 9 January 1970), is an English archaeologist and television producer and presenter, best known for presenting the BBC Two series Escape to the Country. He also frequently presents sections of the environmental documentary series Countryfile on BBC 1.

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Jules Quicherat

Jules Étienne Joseph Quicherat (13 October 1814 – 8 April 1882) was a French historian and archaeologist.

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Jules Toutain

Jules François Toutain (b. Vincennes, November 20, 1865 – d. Paris, January 18, 1961) was a French archeologist.

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Julia and Vanessa Kapatelis

Julia Kapatelis and her daughter Vanessa "Nessie" Kapatelis are fictional characters created by writer/artist George Pérez for the Wonder Woman ongoing series published by DC Comics.

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Julia Chang

is a character in the Tekken series of fighting games by Namco, where she was introduced in Tekken 3 in 1997.

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Julian Bennett (archaeologist)

Dr Julian Bennett is a British archeologist.

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Julian D. Richards

Julian Daryl Richards is a British archaeologist.

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Julian Pitt-Rivers

Julian Alfred Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers (16 March 1919 – 12 August 2001) was a British social anthropologist, an ethnographer, and a professor at universities in three countries.

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Julian Richards (archaeologist)

Julian C. Richards FSA, MIFA (born 1951) is a British television and radio presenter, writer and archaeologist with over 30 years experience of fieldwork and publication.

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Julian Thomas

Julian Stewart Thomas (born 1959) is a British archaeologist, publishing on the Neolithic and Bronze Age prehistory of Britain and north-west Europe.

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Julie Graham

Julie Graham (born 24 July 1965) is a Scottish television and film actress.

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Julie K. Stein

Julie K. Stein is an American geoarchaeologist, who is best known for her research on the coastal adaptions of prehistoric humans in the Pacific Northwest.

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Julien Sacaze

Julien-Etienne-Léopold Sacaze (24 September 1847, Saint-Gaudens – 20 November 1889) was a French lawyer, historian and archaeologist known for his epigraphic investigations of the Pyrenees region.

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Julien-David Le Roy

Julien David Le Roy, also Leroy (6 May 1724 in Paris – 28 January 1803 in Paris) was an 18th-century French architect and archaeologist, who engaged in a rivalry with Britons James Stuart and Nicholas Revett over who would publish the first professional description of the Acropolis of Athens since an early 1682 work by Antoine Desgodetz.

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Juliet Clutton-Brock

Juliet Clutton-Brock, FSA, FZS (6 September 1933 – 21 September 2015) was an English zooarchaeologist and curator, specialising in domesticated mammals.

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Juliet Morrow

Juliet Morrow is an American archaeologist and a professor of Anthropology at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Arkansas.

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Julio C. Tello

Julio César Tello (April 11, 1880 – June 3, 1947) was a Peruvian archaeologist.

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Julio de Urquijo e Ibarra

Julio de Urquijo e Ibarra, Count of Urquijo (1871-1950), in Basque self-styled as Julio Urkixokoa, was a Basque linguist, cultural activist, and a Spanish Carlist politician.

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Juliobriga

Juliobriga (Julióbriga, (Iuliobriga, Ἰουλιόβριγα) was the most important urban centre in Roman Cantabria, as stated by numerous Latin authors including Pliny the Elder. The site has traditionally been identified with ruins in the village of Retortillo (Cantabria) and its Villafría district, in the municipality of Campoo de Enmedio. Its founding, during the Cantabrian Wars (29 BC-19 BC), made it a powerful symbol of Roman domination of the tribes of the Cantabri. The city was named after the reigning emperor Augustus and his adopted family name, the gens Julia, Mangas Manjarrés, J. La Hispania Romana. en Manuel Prado, J. (dir.) Historia de España. Esplugues de Llobregat: Ediciones Orbis, S.A.; 1991. Vol. I «Prehistoria a 409», p. 192.. with the Celtic toponym element -briga, common in Iberia. Due to its strategic location in the Besaya valley, it was able to control trade between the Douro river and the Bay of Biscay. Juliobriga grew slowly, reaching its peak between the end of the 1st century and the early 2nd century AD. Following that, its population began to decline, until the city was completely abandoned in the 3rd century. The ruins of Retortillo were first identified with Julióbriga in the second half of the 18th century by Enrique Florez. Numerous historians and archaeologists have worked on the site since, including some of Spain's foremost. The ruins of Juliobriga were declared a Heritage Site (Bien de Interés Cultural) by the Spanish Government on March 29, 1985.

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Julius Schubring

Johannes Julius Schubring (28 March 1839, Dessau – 5 June 1914) was a German classical scholar, known for his studies on the archaeological topography of Sicily.

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Julius von Schlosser

Julius Alwin Franz Georg Andreas Ritter von Schlosser (23 September 1866, Vienna – 1 December 1938, Vienna) was an Austrian art historian and an important member of the Vienna School of Art History.

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Julliberrie's Grave

Julliberrie's Grave, also known as The Giant's Grave or The Grave, is an unchambered long barrow located near to the village of Chilham in the south-eastern English county of Kent.

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Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle is a 2017 American adventure comedy film directed by Jake Kasdan and written by Chris McKenna, Erik Sommers, Scott Rosenberg, and Jeff Pinkner, based on a story by McKenna.

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Junction Group

The Junction Group is a site of earthworks located two miles southwest of Chillicothe, Ohio in the United States.

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June Helm

June Helm (September 13, 1924 – February 5, 2004) was an American anthropologist, primarily known for her work with the Dene people in the Mackenzie River drainage.

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Junimea

Junimea was a Romanian literary society founded in Iaşi in 1863, through the initiative of several foreign-educated personalities led by Titu Maiorescu, Petre P. Carp, Vasile Pogor, Theodor Rosetti and Iacob Negruzzi.

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Junius Bird

Junius Bouton Bird (1907–1982), born in Rye, New York, was an American archaeologist who was appointed curator of South American Archaeology at the American Museum of Natural History in 1934.

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Jupiter Column

A Jupiter Column (Jupitergigantensäule or Jupitersäule) is an archaeological monument belonging to a type widespread in Roman Germania.

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Jupiter Dolichenus

Jupiter Dolichenus was a Roman god whose mystery cult was widespread in the Roman Empire from the early-2nd to mid-3rd centuries AD.

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Jupiter Inlet Historic and Archeological Site

The Jupiter Inlet Historic and Archeological Site is an archaeological site in Jupiter, Florida.

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Jura (ship, 1854)

The Jura was a wooden, flush deck, paddle steamer, originally built for service on Lake Neuchâtel, but which was sold after seven years to work on Lake Constance, and sank in 1864 after a collision with the Stadt Zürich.

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Jura, Scotland

Jura (Diùra) is an island in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland, adjacent to and to the north-east of Islay.

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Jussi Parikka

Jussi Parikka is a Finnish new media theorist and Professor in Technological Culture & Aesthetics at Winchester School of Art (University of Southampton).

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Justin Pollard

Justin David Pollard (born 30 January 1968) is a British historian, television producer, writer and entrepreneur.

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Jutta Meischner

Jutta Frieda Luise Meischner (born 1935, Danzig, Germany) is a German archeologist with specialities in philology, classical archaeology, ancient history with a doctorate on Classical Archaeology.

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K. A. Nilakanta Sastri

Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta Sastri (12 August 1892 – 15 June 1975) was an Indian historian who wrote on South Indian history.

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K. Aslihan Yener

K.

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K. K. Muhammed

Karingamannu Kuzhiyil Muhammed (born 1 July 1952) is an Indian archaeologist.

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K. Paddayya

Katragadda Paddayya is an Indian archaeologist, Professor Emeritus and a former Director of Deccan College, known to have introduced two major perspectives in archaeological theory and methodology.

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K. V. Ramesh (archaeologist)

Koluvail Vyasaraya Ramesh (8 June 1935 - 10 July 2013) was an Indian epigraphist and Sanskrit scholar who served as Chief Epigraphist and Joint Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI).

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Ka'ba-ye Zartosht

Ka'ba-ye Zartosht is the name of a stone quadrangular and stepped structure in the Naqsh-e Rustam compound beside Zangiabad village in Marvdasht county in Fars, Iran.

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Kacchi Plain

Kacchi Plain or Kachhi Plain is located in southern Balochistan Province of southwestern Pakistan.

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Kachhi District

The district of Kachhi or Kacchi (Balochi and ضِلع کچّھی), known until 2008 as Bolan (ضِلع بولان), is a district in central Balochistan, Pakistan.

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Kadiyala Venkateswara Rao

Kadiyala Venkateswara Rao (born April 7, 1948) is a retired sports Deputy director in Sports Authority of Andhra Pradesh, a professional freelance-archaeologist.

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Kahaluu Taro Lo'i

The Kahaluu Taro Loi Historic District, also known as the Āhuimanu Taro Complex, in Kahaluokinau on the windward side of Oʻahu, is the most complex and largest intact system of terraces for growing wetland taro on Oʻahu.

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Kahramanmaraş Archaeology Museum

Kahramanmaraş Archaeology Museum is a museum in Kahramanmaraş, Turkey.

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Kail

Kail is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kaiser Tufail

Air Commodore Kaiser Tufail TI(M), (قیصر طفیل) is a retired fighter pilot of the Pakistan Air Force and is better-known as an aviation historian, particularly with regard to the largely unbiased coverage of the Indo-Pakistani Wars.

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Kakapora

Kakapora is a tehsil in Pulwama district, of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, India.

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Kalabhairavi Temple

Kalabhairavi Temple is located (Location Lat- 20°21’ 40", Long- 85° 50’ 77", Elev- 76 ft) within the Jaleswar Siva Temple Precinct, Kalarahanga.

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Kalahari Debate

The Kalahari Debate is a series of back and forth arguments that began in the 1980s amongst anthropologists, archaeologists, and historians about how the San people and hunter-gatherer societies in southern Africa have lived in the past.

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Kalasasaya

The Kalasasaya (kala for stone; saya or sayasta for standing up) or Stopped Stones is a major archaeological structure that is part of Tiwanaku, an ancient archeological complex in the Andes of western Bolivia that is designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

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Kalce, Logatec

Kalce is a settlement southwest of Logatec in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia.

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Kalina people

The Kalina, also known as the Caribs, Kali'na, mainland Caribs and several other names, are an indigenous people native to the northern coastal areas of South America.

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Kalinga Ethnoarchaeological Project

The Kalinga Ethnoarchaeological Project (KEP), based in the Cordillera Mountains of the Philippines, was one of the longest-running ethnoarchaeological projects in the world.

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Kalingapatnam

Kalingapatnam is a village in Srikakulam district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

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Kallstadt

Kallstadt is a village in the Palatine part of Rhineland-Palatinate, one of Germany's 16 federal states.

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Kamal el-Mallakh

Kamal el-Mallakh (كمال الملاخ) was a famous Coptic-Egyptian archaeologist who discovered The King Khufu Solar ship in 1954.

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Kamares, Crete

Kamares (Καμάρες) is a village in south-central Crete, Greece.

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Kamarupa Anusandhan Samiti

Kamarupa Anusandhan Samiti (The Assam Research Society) is a research society established in 1912 by scholars and researchers to shed light on the history, civilization and culture of ancient Assam.

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Kamboi

Kamboi is a town located in Chanasma taluka, in Patan district, in the modern Indian state of Gujarat.

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Kamyar Abdi

Kamyar Abdi is an Iranian archaeologist, receiving his M.A. in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, at University of Chicago (1997) and his Ph.D. from University of Michigan in Anthropology (2002).

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Kanawha River

The Kanawha River is a tributary of the Ohio River, approximately 97 mi (156 km) long, in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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Kanesatake

Kanehsatà:ke is a Kanien'kéha:ka Mohawk settlement on the shore of the Lake of Two Mountains in southeastern Quebec, Canada, at the confluence of the Ottawa and St.

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Kangirsuk

Kangirsuk (in Inuktitut: ᑲᖏᕐᓱᖅ/Kangirsuq, meaning "the bay") is an Inuit village in northern Nunavik, Quebec, Canada.

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Kankarbagh

Kankarbagh or Kankarbagh Colony is a neighbourhood and residential area in Patna.

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Kannonji Castle

The ruins of are on the ridgeline of Mount Kinugasa in the town of Azuchi, Shiga Prefecture, not far from the ruins of Azuchi Castle.

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Kansas City Hopewell

The Kansas City Hopewell were the farthest west regional variation of the Hopewell tradition of the Middle Woodland period (100 BCE – 700 CE).

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Kansyore Pottery

To understand past cultures archaeologists analyze many artifacts.

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Kaogu

Kaogu is a peer-reviewed monthly academic journal of Chinese archaeology, published by the Institute of Archaeology of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

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Kappel, Rhineland-Palatinate

Kappel is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kara Cooney

Kathlyn M. (Kara) Cooney is an Egyptologist, archaeologist, associate professor of Egyptian Art and Architecture at UCLA and chair of the Department of Near Eastern Language and Cultures at UCLA.

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Karachi

Karachi (کراچی; ALA-LC:,; ڪراچي) is the capital of the Pakistani province of Sindh.

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Karadeniz Ereğli Museum

Karadeniz Ereğli Museum (also known as Ereğli Museum) is a museum in Ereğli ilçe (district) of Zonguldak Province, Turkey.

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Karaman Museum

Karaman Museum is in Karaman, Turkey The museum is at.

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Kardzhali

Kardzhali (Кърджали, Kǎrdžali; Kırcaali; Κάρτζαλι, Kártzali), sometimes spelt Kardzali or Kurdzhali, is a town in the Eastern Rhodopes in Bulgaria, centre of Kardzhali Municipality and Kardzhali Province.

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Karel Absolon

Karel Absolon (16 June 1877 – 6 October 1960) was a Czech archaeologist, geographer, paleontologist, and speleologist.

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Karel Škorpil

Karel Václav Škorpil (Карел Вацлав Шкорпил; 15 May 18599 March 1944) was a Czech-Bulgarian archaeologist and museum worker credited along with his brother Hermann with the establishment of those two disciplines in Bulgaria.

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Kargaly

Kargaly is a copper mining-metallurgical district in the southern Urals of Russia.

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Karim Sadr

Karim Sadr is an archaeologist contributing to research in southern Africa.

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Karl Bötticher

Karl Gottlieb Wilhelm Bötticher (29 May 1806, Nordhausen – 19 June 1889, Berlin) was a German archaeologist who specialized in architecture.

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Karl Böttiger

Karl August Böttiger (8 June 1760 – 17 November 1835) was a German archaeologist and classicist, and a prominent member of the literary and artistic circles in Weimar and Jena.

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Karl Dilthey

Karl Dilthey (18 March 1839, Biebrich – 4 March 1907, Göttingen) was a German classical scholar and archaeologist.

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Karl Friederichs

Karl Friederichs (7 April 1831 in Delmenhorst – 18 October 1871 in Berlin) was a German classical philologist and archaeologist.

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Karl Friedrich Hermann

Karl Friedrich Hermann (4 August 1804 – 31 December 1855) was a German classical scholar and antiquary.

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Karl Ludwig Fernow

Karl Ludwig Fernow (19 November 1763 – 4 December 1808) was a German art critic and archaeologist.

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Karl Otfried Müller

Karl Otfried Müller (28 August 1797 – 1 August 1840) was a German scholar and Philodorian, or admirer of ancient Sparta, who introduced the modern study of Greek mythology.

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Karl Richard Lepsius

Karl or Carl Richard Lepsius (23 December 1810– 10 July 1884) was a pioneering Prussian Egyptologist and linguist and pioneer of modern archaeology.

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Karl Schefold

Karl Schefold (26 January 1905 – 16 April 1999) was a classical archaeologist based in Basel, Switzerland.

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Karl Schlabow

Karl Schlabow (27 April 1891 – 30 September 1984) was a German archaeologist, museum director and conservator with specialisations in textiles and in restoration of bog bodies.

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Karl Taube

Karl Andreas Taube (born September 14, 1957) is an American Mesoamericanist, archaeologist, epigrapher and ethnohistorian, known for his publications and research into the pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica and the American Southwest.

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Karl Vollmöller

Karl Gustav Vollmöller (or Vollmoeller; 7 May 1878 – 18 October 1948) was a German philologist, archaeologist, poet, playwright, screenwriter, and aircraft designer.

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Karl von Lützow

Karl von Lützow (25 December 1832 – 22 April 1897) was a German art historian and critic.

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Karo Ghafadaryan

Karo Ghafadaryan (Կարո Ղաֆադարյան; April 20, 1907December 21, 1976) was a Soviet Armenian archaeologist, historian, epigraphist, philologist. He was the director of the History Museum of Armenia (1940–1965). "Under his guidance, the Museum became an advanced research and cultural-educational centre" in Armenia. Born in Akhaltsikhe, he graduated from the Yerevan State University in 1931. Since 1932 he worked at the Institute of Culture History and took part in the excavations of Shengavit, Vagharshapat and other ancient locations. He supervised the excavations of the ruins of the medieval Armenian capital of Dvin for around three decades. Since 1959 until his death he headed the department of medieval archaeology of the Armenian Academy of Sciences.

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Karol Myśliwiec

Karol Myśliwiec (born 3 November 1943) is a Polish egyptologist, celebrated for his ongoing efforts at Saqqara to discover the tomb of Imhotep.

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Karol Točík

Karol Točík (* 1890, Ústie nad Oravou – † 1960, Žilina) was Slovak Roman Catholic priest and dean in Turzovka, and regional historian.

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Karsten Konrad

Karsten Konrad (born 1962) is a German abstract sculptor.

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Kashafrud

Kashafrud Basin is an archaeological site in Iran, known for the Lower Palaeolithic artifacts collected there; these are the oldest-known evidence for human occupation of Iran., There are some collections of simple core and flake stone artifacts collected by C. Thibault in 1974-75.

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Kashan

Kashan (کاشان, also Romanized as: Kāshān) is a city in Isfahan province, Iran.

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Kashan County

Kashan County (شهرستان کاشان) is a county in Isfahan Province in Iran.

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Kate Devlin

Kate Devlin, born Adela Katharine Devlin is a British computer scientist specialising in Artificial intelligence and Human–computer interaction (HCI).

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Kate Pretty

Katharine Bridget 'Kate' Pretty, CBE, FSA (born 18 October 1945) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Katharina Galor

Katharina Galor (born 1966) is a German-born Israeli archaeologist specializing in ancient Israel-Palestine and Syria, mainly focusing on the Roman and Byzantine periods.

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Katharyne Mitchell

Katharyne Mitchell (born 20 February 1961) is an American geographer who is currently Professor of Sociology and Dean of the Social Sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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Katherine Routledge

Katherine Maria Routledge, née Pease (11 August 1866 – 13 December 1935), was an English archaeologist and anthropologist who, in 1914, initiated (but did not complete) the first true survey of Easter Island.

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Kathleen A. Deagan

Kathleen A. Deagan is an American archaeologist who primarily focuses on excavations in Florida and the Caribbean.

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Kathleen K. Gilmore

Kathleen K. Gilmore (November 12, 1914 – March 18, 2010) was an American archaeologist and specialist on Spanish colonial archaeology.

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Kathleen Kenyon

Dame Kathleen Mary Kenyon, (5 January 1906 – 24 August 1978), was a leading British archaeologist of Neolithic culture in the Fertile Crescent.

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Kathleen O'Neal Gear

Kathleen O'Neal Gear (born 1954) is an American writer.

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Kathryn Hunt (archaeologist)

Kathryn Hunt is an American archaeologist and paleopathologist specializing in paleo-oncology, the multidisciplinary study of cancer in human history.

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Katif (moshav)

Katif (קָטִיף) was an Israeli settlement in the Gush Katif bloc in the Gaza Strip, about 1 km north of the Palestinian refugee camp of Deir al-Balah Camp.

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Katzenberg Hillfort

Katzenberg Hillfort (Spätrömische Höhenbefestigung Katzenberg or Römerwarte Mayen) is a Roman refuge fort near Mayen in Germany dating to the 4th century.

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Kaunisvaara

Kaunisvaara is a village in northern Sweden, in Pajala Municipality, 100 km north of the Arctic Circle.

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Kaunolu Village Site

Kaunolū Village Site is located on the south coast of the island of Lānaʻi.

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Kavadarci

Kavadarci (Кавадарци) is a town in the Tikveš region of the Republic of Macedonia.

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Kayabaşı, Başakşehir

Kayabaşı is a quarter of Başakşehir in İstanbul.

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Kayseri Archaeology Museum

Kayseri Archaeology Museum is a museum in Kayseri, Turkey.

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Kazimierz Żurowski

Kazimierz Żurowski (12 August 1909 in Zagórz – 19 March 1987 in Gniezno) was a Polish archaeologist.

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Kazimierz Grochowski

Kazimierz Grochowski (1873-1937) was a Polish mining engineer, explorer, geologist, ethnographer, archaeologist, and writer specializing in studies of Siberia, Mongolia, and Manchuria.

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Kazimierz Michałowski

Kazimierz Józef Marian Michałowski (born December 14, 1901 in Tarnopol – January 1, 1981 in Warsaw) was a Polish archaeologist and Egyptologist, art historian, member of the Polish Academy of Sciences, professor ordinarius of the University of Warsaw as well as the founder of the Polish school of Mediterranean archaeology and a precursor of Nubiology.

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K–Ar dating

Potassium–argon dating, abbreviated K–Ar dating, is a radiometric dating method used in geochronology and archaeology.

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Köniz

Köniz is a statistical town, however considers itself still as a village, and a municipality in the Bern-Mittelland administrative district right on the southern border to Bern in the canton of Bern in Switzerland.

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Körborn

Körborn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Köthen (Anhalt)

Köthen (Anhalt) is a city in Germany.

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Kütahya Archaeology Museum

Kütahya Archaeological Museum is a museum in Kütahya, Turkey.

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Kırşehir Museum

Kırşehir Museum is a museum in Kırşehir, Turkey The museum is on Ahi Evran street in Kırşehir at.

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Kırklareli Museum

Kırklareli Museum (Kırklareli Müzesi) is a national museum in Kırklareli, Turkey, exhibiting natural history specimens, ethnographical items related to the region's history of cultural life, and archaeological artifacts found in and around the city.

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Keatley Creek Archaeological Site

Keatley Creek is a significant archaeological site in the interior of British Columbia and in the traditional territory of the St'at'imc peoples.

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Kecskemét

Kecskemét is a city in the central part of Hungary.

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Keisen, Fukuoka

is a town located in Kaho District, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan.

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Keith DeVries

Keith Robert DeVries (January 2, 1937 – July 16, 2006) was a prominent archaeologist and expert on the Phrygian city of Gordium, in what is now Turkey.

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Kellenbach

Kellenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kellia

Kellia ("the Cells"), referred to as "the innermost desert", was a 4th-century Egyptian Christian monastic community spread out over many square kilometers in the Nitrian Desert.

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Kellie Jones

Kellie Jones (born 1959) is an American Associate Professor in Art History and Archaeology in African American Studies at Columbia University.

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Kelsey Museum of Archaeology

The Kelsey Museum of Archaeology is a museum of archaeology located on the University of Michigan central campus in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in the United States.

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Kelsterbach

Kelsterbach is a town in Groß-Gerau district in Hessen, Germany and part of the Frankfurt Rhein-Main urban area.

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Ken Dark

Ken Dark (born in Brixton, London in 1961) is a British archaeologist who works on the 1st millennium AD in Europe (including Roman and immediately post-Roman Britain) and the Roman and Byzantine Middle East, on the archaeology of religion (especially early Christian archaeology), archaeological theory and methods, and on the relationship between the study of the past and contemporary global political, cultural and economic issues.

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Kenan Erim

Kenan Tevfik Erim (February 13, 1929 in İstanbul – November 3, 1990 in Ankara) was a Turkish archaeologist who excavated from 1961 until his death at the site of Aphrodisias in Turkey.

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Kendal Museum

Kendal Museum is a local museum in Kendal, Cumbria, on the edge of the Lake District in northwest England.

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Kennedy's Brain

Kennedy's Brain is a novel by Swedish writer Henning Mankell, that was originally published in the Swedish language in 2005.

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Kenneth Emory

Kenneth Pike Emory (November 23, 1897 – January 2, 1992) was an American anthropologist who played a key role in shaping modern anthropology in Oceania.

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Kenneth Feder

Kenneth L. "Kenny" Feder (born August 1, 1952) is a professor of archaeology at Central Connecticut State University and the author of several books on archaeology and criticism of pseudoarchaeology such as Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology.

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Kenneth Garrett

Kenneth Garrett (September 23, 1953) is an American photographer of archaeology who was born in Columbia, Missouri and made 70 photos for National Geographic.

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Kenneth Irons

Kenneth Irons is a fictional comic book supervillain.

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Kenneth Kitchen

Kenneth Anderson Kitchen (born 1932) is a British Bible scholar, Ancient Near Eastern historian, and Personal and Brunner Professor Emeritus of Egyptology and Honorary Research Fellow at the School of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, University of Liverpool, England.

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Kenneth Murray (archaeologist)

Kenneth C. Murray (1903 – 21 April 1972) was an English archaeologist and teacher.

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Kenneth St Joseph

John Kenneth Sinclair St Joseph, CBE, FBA (13 November 1912 – 11 March 1994) was a British archaeologist, geologist and Royal Air Force (RAF) veteran who pioneered the use of aerial photography as a method of archaeological research in Britain and Ireland.

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Kenneth Steer

Kenneth Arthur Steer, CBE (12 November 191320 February 2007) was a British archaeologist and British Army officer.

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Kent Archaeological Society

The Kent Archaeological Society was founded in 1857 to promote the study and publication of archaeology and history, especially that pertaining to the ancient county of Kent in England.

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Kent V. Flannery

Kent Vaughn Flannery (born 1934) is a North American archaeologist who has conducted and published extensive research on the pre-Columbian cultures and civilizations of Mesoamerica, and in particular those of central and southern Mexico.

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Kents Cavern

Kents Cavern is a cave system in Torquay, Devon, England.

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Kenyon Medal

The Kenyon Medal is awarded every two years by the British Academy 'in recognition of work in the field of classical studies and archaeology'.

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Kermanshah Province

Kermanshah Province (استان كرمانشاه, Ostān-e Kermanšah) is one of the 31 provinces of Iran.

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Kernavė

Kernavė was a medieval capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and today is a tourist attraction and an archeological site (population 272, 2011).

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Kerpen, Rhineland-Palatinate

Kerpen (Eifel) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kessingland

Kessingland is a large village in the Waveney District of the English county of Suffolk.

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Kevin Andrews (writer)

Kevin Andrews; was a philhellene, writer and archaeologist.

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Kevin Greene (archaeologist)

Kevin Greene is a British classical archaeologist.

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Key Biscayne

Key Biscayne (Cayo Vizcaíno) is an island located in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States, between the Atlantic Ocean and Biscayne Bay.

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Key Marco

Key Marco was an archaeological site (8CR48) consisting of a large shell works island next to Marco Island, Florida.

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Khafra

Khafra (also read as Khafre, Khefren and Χεφρήν Chephren) was an ancient Egyptian king (pharaoh) of the 4th dynasty during the Old Kingdom.

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Khaled al-Asaad

Khaled al-Asaad (خالد الأسعد. (1 January 1932 – 18 August 2015) was a Syrian archaeologist and the head of antiquities for the ancient city of Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. He held this position for over 40 years. Al-Asaad was publicly beheaded by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) on 18 August 2015. He was 83 years old.

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Khallet el Hamra

Khallet el Hamra or Khallet Hamra is a ravine or wadi joining the larger Wadi Yaroun located southeast of Ain Ebelin the Bint Jbeil District of Nabatieh Governorate in Lebanon.

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Kharis

Kharis is a character featured in Universal Studios's Mummy series in the 1940s following their original 1932 film The Mummy, which starred Boris Karloff as a different mummy character, Imhotep, though their backstories are practically identical.

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Khazar University Department of History and Archaeology

The Department of History and Archaeology is one of the leading academic departments in Khazar University.

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Khen Shish

Khen Shish (חן שיש; born 1970) is an Israeli painter and installation artist.

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Khenthap

Khenthap (also written Khenet-Hapi) was allegedly a queen of Ancient Egypt.

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Khmer people

Khmer people (ខ្មែរ,, Northern Khmer pronunciation) are a Southeast Asian ethnic group native to Cambodia, accounting for 97.6% of the country's 15.9 million people.

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Khufu

Khufu (full name Khnum Khufu, known to the Greeks as Cheops, was an ancient Egyptian monarch who ruled during the Fourth Dynasty, in the first half of the Old Kingdom period (26th century BC). Khufu was the second ruler of the 4th dynasty; he followed his possible father, king Sneferu, on the throne. He is generally accepted as having commissioned the Great Pyramid of Giza, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, but many other aspects of his reign are rather poorly documented. The only completely preserved portrait of the king is a three-inch high ivory figurine found in a temple ruin of a later period at Abydos in 1903. All other reliefs and statues were found in fragments, and many buildings of Khufu are lost. Everything known about Khufu comes from inscriptions in his necropolis at Giza and later documents. For example, Khufu is the main character noted in the Papyrus Westcar from the 13th dynasty. Most documents that mention king Khufu were written by ancient Egyptian and Greek historians around 300 BC. Khufu's obituary is presented there in a conflicting way: while the king enjoyed a long lasting cultural heritage preservation during the period of the Old Kingdom and the New Kingdom, the ancient historians Manetho, Diodorus and Herodotus hand down a very negative depiction of Khufu's character. Thanks to these documents, an obscure and critical picture of Khufu's personality persists.

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Khuzestan Province

Khuzestan Province (استان خوزستان Ostān-e Khūzestān, محافظة خوزستان Muḥāfaẓa Khūzistān) is one of the 31 provinces of Iran.

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Khwarezm

Khwarezm, or Chorasmia (خوارزم, Xvârazm) is a large oasis region on the Amu Darya river delta in western Central Asia, bordered on the north by the (former) Aral Sea, on the east by the Kyzylkum desert, on the south by the Karakum desert, and on the west by the Ustyurt Plateau.

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Kiel

Kiel is the capital and most populous city in the northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein, with a population of 249,023 (2016).

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Kielder Forest

Kielder Forest is a large forestry plantation in Northumberland, England, surrounding Kielder village and the Kielder Water reservoir.

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Kikar Hamedina

Kikar Hamedina (English: "State Square"), is the largest plaza in Tel Aviv.

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Kikiaola

Kīkīaola is a historic irrigation ditch (auwai) located near Waimea on the island of Kauai in the U.S. state of Hawaii.

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Kilbirnie

Kilbirnie (Gaelic: Cill Bhraonaigh) is a small town of 7642 inhabitants situated in the Garnock Valley area of North Ayrshire, on the west coast of Scotland.

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Kildrummy Castle

Kildrummy Castle is a ruined castle near Kildrummy, in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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Kilflynn

Kilflynn is a village and a civil parish in north County Kerry, Ireland.

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Kilis Museum

Kilis Museum is a museum in Kilis, Turkey.

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Kilkenny Archaeological Society

The Kilkenny Archaeological Society is an archaeological society in County Kilkenny, Ireland.

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Killarney National Park

Killarney National Park (Páirc Náisiúnta Chill Airne), near the town of Killarney, County Kerry, was the first national park in Ireland, created when Muckross Estate was donated to the Irish Free State in 1932.

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Killavullen Caves

The Killavullen Caves are limestone caves near the village of Killavullen in County Cork, Ireland.

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Killing Time (video game)

Killing Time is a horror-themed first-person shooter video game developed by Studio 3DO.

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Kim Jeong-hak

Kim Jeong-hak (October 16, 1911 – April 25, 2006) was a Korean archaeologist.

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Kim Jung-bae

Kim Jung-bae (born August 1, 1940) is an ancient historian and archaeologist, university professor emeritus, and former President of Korea University in Seoul, South Korea.

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Kim Won-yong

Kim Won-yong (1922–1993) was a South Korean archaeologist and art historian.

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Kimball Island Midden Archeological Site

The Kimball Island Midden Archeological Site is an archaeological site near Astor, Florida.

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Kimberley, Northern Cape

Kimberley is the capital and largest city of the Northern Cape Province of South Africa.

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Kincaid Mounds State Historic Site

The Kincaid Mounds Historic Site (11MX2-11; 11PO2-10) 1050-1400 CE, is the site of a city from the prehistoric Mississippian culture.

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Kinetix

Kinetix, (Zoë Saugin of the planet Aleph) is a fictional character, a comic book superheroine in the DC Comics universe.

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King William's College

King William's College (Colleish Ree Illiam) is an International Baccalaureate HMC independent school for ages 3 to 18, situated near Castletown on the Isle of Man.

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King's Stables

The King's Stables is an archaeological site in County Armagh, Northern Ireland.

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Kingdom of Middag

The Kingdom of Middag was a supra-tribal alliance located in the central western plains of Taiwan in the 17th century.

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Kingdom of Strathclyde

Strathclyde (lit. "Strath of the River Clyde"), originally Ystrad Clud or Alclud (and Strath-Clota in Anglo-Saxon), was one of the early medieval kingdoms of the Britons in Hen Ogledd ("the Old North"), the Brythonic-speaking parts of what is now southern Scotland and northern England.

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Kings Langley Palace

Kings Langley Palace was a 13th-century Royal Palace which was located to the west of the Hertfordshire village of Kings Langley in England.

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Kingston Russell Stone Circle

Kingston Russell Stone Circle, also known as the Gorwell Circle, is a stone circle located between the villages of Abbotsbury and Littlebredy in the south-western English county of Dorset.

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Kingstone, Somerset

Kingstone is a village and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated near Ilminster, north east of Chard in the South Somerset district.

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Kinheim, Germany

Kinheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kinishba Ruins

Kinishba Ruins is a 600-room Mogollon great house archaeological site in eastern Arizona and is administered by the White Mountain Apache Tribe.

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Kintampo Complex

Kintampo complex describes a period in prehistory that saw the transition to sedentism in West Africa, specifically Ghana and parts of eastern Côte d'Ivoire that began sometime between 2500-1400 BCE.

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Kintore, Aberdeenshire

Kintore (Gaelic: Ceann Tòrr) is a town and former royal burgh near Inverurie in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, now bypassed by the A96 road between Aberdeen and Inverness.

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Kirchberg, Rhein-Hunsrück

Kirchberg, the Stadt auf dem Berg (“Town on the Mountain”), called Kerbrich in Moselle Franconian, is a town in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kirchheim an der Weinstraße

Kirchheim an der Weinstraße (or Kirchheim an der Weinstrasse) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Dürkheim district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kirk Bryan (geologist)

Kirk Bryan (22 July 1888 in Albuquerque, New Mexico – 22 August 1950 in Cody, Wyoming) was an American geologist on the faculty of Harvard University from 1925 until his death in 1950.

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Kirktown of Fetteresso

The Kirktown of Fetteresso is a well-preserved village near Stonehaven, Scotland.

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Kirn

Kirn is a town in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany.

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Kirsty Hayes

Christine Isobel "Kirsty" Hayes (born 2 February 1977) is a British diplomat and civil servant.

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Kisatchie National Forest

Kisatchie National Forest, the only National forest in Louisiana, United States, is located in the forested piney hills and hardwood bottoms of seven central and northern parishes.

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Kiskunhalas

Kiskunhalas (Hallasch) is a city in Bács-Kiskun County, Hungary.

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Kistarcsa

Kistarcsa is a town in Pest county, Budapest metropolitan area, Hungary.

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Kit's Coty House

Kit's Coty House or Kit's Coty is a chambered long barrow located near to the village of Aylesford in the southeastern English county of Kent.

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Kitasoo

The Kitasoo are one of the 14 tribes of the Tsimshian people in Canada, who inhabit, along with Xai'xais people of Heiltsuk ethnic affiliation, the village of Klemtu, British Columbia.

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Kittur Fort

Kittur is a fort located in the Karnataka state of India, it is the former capital of a minor principality as well as a major archaeological site.

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Kitty Pilgrim

Kathryn Pilgrim, known professionally as Kitty Pilgrim, has worked throughout her career as international journalist and author.

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Kituwa

The Cherokee believe the ancient settlement of Kituwa (also spelled Kituwah, Keetoowah, Kittowa, Kitara and other similar variations) or giduwa (Cherokee:ᎩᏚᏩ), on the Tuckasegee River is their original settlement and is one of the "seven mother towns" in the Southeast.

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Kiz Bridge

Kiz Bridge (پل‌دختر, Qız Körpüsü-قيز کۆرپۆسۆ) is a historical bridge near the Mianeh in East Azerbaijan.

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Kladovo

Kladovo (Кладово) is a town and municipality located in the Bor District of eastern Serbia.

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Klaipėda Castle

Klaipėda Castle, also known as Memelburg or Memel Castle, is an archeological site and museum housed in a castle built by the Teutonic Knights in Klaipėda, Lithuania, near the Baltic Sea.

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Klang Bell

The Klang Bell is an ancient bronze bell found in the city of Klang, Selangor state, western Malaysia.

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Klaus Leidorf

Klaus Leidorf (born 5 June 1956) is a German aerial archaeologist.

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Klaus Schmidt (archaeologist)

Klaus Schmidt (11 December 1953 – 20 July 2014) was a German archaeologist and pre-historian who led the excavations at Göbekli Tepe from 1996 to 2014.

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Kleinostheim

Kleinostheim is a community in the Aschaffenburg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany.

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Kleinwallstadt

Kleinwallstadt is a market community in the Miltenberg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany and the seat of the like-named Verwaltungsgemeinschaft (Administrative Community).

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Klina

Klina (Serbian Cyrillic: Клина, Klinë) is a town and municipality located in the Peć District of north-western Kosovo.

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Klio (journal)

Klio: Beiträge zur alten Geschichte is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal covering ancient history, focussing on the history of Ancient Greece and Rome from the archaic period to Late Antiquity, as well as relationships with the Ancient Near East.

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Kluczbork

Kluczbork (Kreuzburg O.S.) is a town in southwestern Poland with 24,962 inhabitants (2011), situated in the Opole Voivodeship.

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KM2 and KM3 sites

KM2 and KM3 are Early Iron Age complex industrial archaeological sites in Tanzania, excavated by a team led by archaeologist Peter Schmidt in the late 1970s and 1980s.

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Kmt (magazine)

Kmt is a magazine on ancient Egypt published quarterly by Kmt communications.

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Knapping

Knapping is the shaping of flint, chert, obsidian or other conchoidal fracturing stone through the process of lithic reduction to manufacture stone tools, strikers for flintlock firearms, or to produce flat-faced stones for building or facing walls, and flushwork decoration.

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Knossos

Knossos (also Cnossos, both pronounced; Κνωσός, Knōsós) is the largest Bronze Age archaeological site on Crete and has been called Europe's oldest city.

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Kočani medieval towers

Kočani medieval towers are located in Kocani, Republic of Macedonia.

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Kocaeli Museum

Kocaeli Museum, a.k.a. Kocaeli Archaeology and Ethnography Museum or İzmit Museum, Kocaeli Müzesi) is a national museum in Kocaeli (İzmit), northwestern Turkey, exhibiting archaeological artifacts and ethnographic objects. It is housed in the former railway station of İzmit. The museum is situated on İstasyon St. in Kozlu neighborhood of İzmit. The railway station was designed by German architect Otto Ritter, and built between 1873 and 1910. The facility covers an area of. The railway station became defunct after the course of the railway, which ran along the coast of Marmara Sea and passed through the city center, was changed to run north of the city. After restoration works for redevelopment, which began in 2004, the former railway station was opened early 2007. The museum consists of 1,965 archaeological, 1,549 ethnographic objects and 5,155 coins. In addition to the exhibition halls, there is a 130-seated conference room and a laboratory. The museum objects are partly exhibited in the museum halls and partly open-air in the museum yard. A steam locomotive and two railroad cars, redesigned as cafeteria and restaurant and situated in front of the museum, serve the visitors. In the museum halls, artifacts from Paleolithic, Hellenic, Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman era are exhibited.

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Kohathites

The Kohathites were one of the three main divisions among the Levites in Biblical times, the other two being the Gershonites and the Merarites.

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Kolárovo Castle

Fort Gúta was a fort near the town of Gúta (modern day Kolárovo) in what is today Slovakia.

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Koldo Mitxelena

Koldo Mitxelena Elissalt (also known as Luis Michelena; 1915, Errenteria, Gipuzkoa – 11 October 1987, San Sebastián) was an eminent Basque linguist.

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Komchen

Komchén is a community in the Mérida Municipality in the state of Yucatán, located in southeastern Mexico.

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Kommos (Crete)

Kommos (Κομμός) is a Greek prehistoric Bronze Age port and archaeological site in southern Crete.

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Komuz

The komuz or qomuz (Kyrgyz: комуз), Azeri Qopuz, Turkish Kopuz, is an ancient fretless string instrument used in Central Asian music, related to certain other Turkic string instruments and the lute.

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Kong: The Animated Series

Kong: The Animated Series is an American-Canadian television series for children that follows King Kong, the monster of the 1933 film of the same name.

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Konken

Konken is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Konrad Helbig

Konrad Helbig (born June 17, 1917 in Leipzig, † February 17, 1986 in Mainz) was a German photographer, art historian and archaeologist.

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Konrad Jażdżewski

Konrad Jażdżewski (1908–1985) was a Polish professor of archeology, doctor honoris causa at the University of Łódź.

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Konstantine Hovhannisyan

Konstantine Hovhannisyan (December 19, 1911 – 1984) was an Armenian professor, architect and archaeologist.

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Konstantinos Nikolopoulos (composer)

Konstantinos Agathophron Nikolopoulos (Κωνσταντίνος Αγαθόφρων Νικολόπουλος; 1786 – 12 June 1841) was a Greek composer, archeologist, and philologist.

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Konuralp Museum

Konuralp Museum is a museum in Düzce Province, Turkey Konuralp, is a town named after an early Ottoman hero in Düzce Province.

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Konya Ereğli Museum

Konya Ereğli Museum (Konya Ereğli Müzesi) is an archaeological and ethnographic museum in Ereğli district of Konya Province, Turkey.

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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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Korea University Museum

Korea University Museum (고려대학교박물관), commonly called The University Museum, is a history, archaeology, and art museum that is part of the Korea University in Seoul, South Korea.

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Korean architecture

Korean architecture refers to the built environment of Korea from c. 30,000 BC to the present.

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Korean nationalist historiography

Korean nationalist historiography is a way of writing Korean history that centers on the Korean minjok, an ethnically or racially defined Korean nation.

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Koro Toro

Koro Toro is an anthropological and an archaeological site located in southern Borkou-Ennedi-Tibesti Region in Chad.

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Kosher wine

Kosher wine is grape wine produced according to Judaism's religious law, specifically, Jewish dietary laws (kashrut).

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Kosovo Museum

Kosovo Museum (Muzeu i Kosovës; script / Музеј Косова) is the National Museum of Kosovo, located in the city of Pristina.

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Kotla Nihang Khan

Kotla Nihang Khan (Gurmukhi: ਕੋਟਲਾ ਨਿਹੰਗ ਖ਼ਾਨ, Shahmukhi: کوٹلہ نهنگ خاں) is a town located about 3 kilometers southeast of Ropar city in Punjab, India.

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Kotosh Religious Tradition

The Kotosh Religious Tradition is a term used by archaeologists to refer to the ritual buildings that were constructed in the mountain drainages of the Andes between circa 3000 and c.1800 BCE, during the Andean preceramic, or Late Archaic period of Andean history.

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Kotturu Dhanadibbalu

Kotturu Dhanadibbalu & Pandavula Guha is an ancient Buddhist site near Kotturu village of Rambilli mandal Visakhapatnam District of Andhra Pradesh.

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Koukonesi

Koukonesi is a small island, situated in the Moudros harbour, west of Poliochne, on the island of Lemnos in the Aegean Sea.

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Koumasa

Koumasa is the site of a prepalatial cemetery on Crete.

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Kouros of Samos

The Kouros of Samos is an ancient Greek sculpture created in the 6th century BCE.

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Krapina

Krapina is a town in northern Croatia and the administrative centre of Krapina-Zagorje County with a population of 4,482 (2011) and a total municipality population of 12,480 (2011).

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Kreimbach-Kaulbach

Kreimbach-Kaulbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kretinga Museum

The Kretinga Museum (Kretingos muziejus), also known as Kretinga Manor, is located near the Baltic Sea in Kretinga, Lithuania.

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Kreuztal

Kreuztal is a town in the Siegen-Wittgenstein district, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

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Kri-kri

The kri-kri (Capra aegagrus cretica), sometimes called the Cretan goat, Agrimi, or Cretan Ibex, is a feral goat inhabiting the Eastern Mediterranean, previously considered a subspecies of wild goat.

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Kristian Kristiansen (archaeologist)

Kristian Kristiansen (born 21 August 1948) is a Danish archaeologist known for his contributions to the study of Bronze Age Europe, heritage studies and archaeological theory.

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Kristinehamn Municipality

Kristinehamn Municipality (Kristinehamns kommun) is a municipality in Värmland County in west central Sweden.

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Kristján Eldjárn

Dr.

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Krosno

Krosno (in full The Royal Free City of Krosno, Królewskie Wolne Miasto Krosno) is a town and county in Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland with 47,140 inhabitants (Metro: 115,617), as of 30 June 2014.

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Ksar Akil flake

Ksar Akil Flake is an oval type of Lithic flake with fine, regular teeth at frequent intervals.

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Kubu Island

Kubu Island (Ga'nnyo) is a dry granite rock island located in the Makgadikgadi Pan area of Botswana.

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Kuksu (religion)

Kuksu, also called the Kuksu Cult, was a religion in Northern California practiced by members within several Indigenous peoples of California before and during contact with the arriving European settlers.

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Kullaberg

Kullaberg is a peninsula and nature reserve of land protruding into the Kattegat in Höganäs Municipality near the town of Mölle in southwest Sweden.

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Kumbhariya, Banaskantha district

Kumbhariya is a village of historical, archeological and religious importance with cultural heritage in Danta Taluka of Banaskantha district, Gujarat, India.

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Kumhrar

Kumhrar or Kumrahar is the name of an area of Patna, where remains of the ancient city of Pataliputra were excavated.

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Kunming Museum

Kunming City Museum (昆明市博物馆) is a history museum in Kunming City, Yunnan, China.

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Kura (Caspian Sea)

The Kura (Kura; Kür; მტკვარი, Mt’k’vari; Կուր, Kur; Κῦρος, Cyrus; کوروش, Kuruš) is an east-flowing river south of the Greater Caucasus Mountains which drains the southern slopes of the Greater Caucasus east into the Caspian Sea.

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Kurgan

In English, the archaeological term kurgan is a loanword from East Slavic languages (and, indirectly, from Turkic languages), equivalent to the archaic English term barrow, also known by the Latin loanword tumulus and terms such as burial mound.

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Kurt Eggers

Kurt Eggers (10 November 1905 in Berlin – 12 August 1943 near Belgorod) was a German writer, poet, songwriter, and playwright with close links to the Nazi party.

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Kusel

Kusel, until 1865 written Cusel, is a town in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Kuthur Ramakrishnan Srinivasan

Kuthur Ramakrishnan Srinivasan (1910–1992) was an Indian archeologist, historian and the author of a number of books on Indian history and culture.

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KV63

KV63 is the most recently opened chamber in Egypt's Valley of the Kings pharaonic necropolis.

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Kydonia

Cydonia or Kydonia (Κυδωνία; Cydonia) was an ancient city-state on the northwest coast of the island of Crete.

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Kyjatice

Kyjatice is a village and municipality in the Rimavská Sobota District of the Banská Bystrica Region of southern Slovakia.

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Kyoto

, officially, is the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture, located in the Kansai region of Japan.

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Kyriakos Charalambides

Kyriakos Charalambides (Κυριάκος Χαραλαμπίδης, Kyriacos Charalambides) is one of the most renowned and celebrated living Cypriot poets.

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Kyriakos Pittakis

Kyriakos S. Pittakis or Pittakys (1798–1863) was a Greek archaeologist from Athens.

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L'Anse aux Meadows

L'Anse aux Meadows (from the French L'Anse-aux-Méduses or "Jellyfish Cove"), is an archaeological site on the northernmost tip of the island of Newfoundland in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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La Blanca

La Blanca is a pre-Columbian Mesoamerican archaeological site in present-day Retalhuleu Department, western Guatemala.

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La Chapelle-aux-Saints

La Chapelle-aux-Saints is a commune in the Corrèze department in central France.

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La Ciudad Blanca

La Ciudad Blanca (Spanish for "The White City") is a legendary settlement said to be located in the Mosquitia region of the Gracias a Dios Department in eastern Honduras.

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La Dehesa

La Dehesa is a suburban neighborhood in Lo Barnechea Commune of Santiago, Chile.

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La Escuera

La Escuera is an early Iberian settlement located close to camino del Convenio in La Marina.

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La Grange, Texas

La Grange is a city in Fayette County, Texas, United States, near the Colorado River.

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La Groutte

La Groutte is a commune in the Cher department in the Centre-Val de Loire region of France.

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La Joyanca

La Joyanca is the modern name for a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site located south of the San Pedro Martir river in the Petén department of Guatemala.

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La Laguna Cathedral

The Cathedral of San Cristóbal de La Laguna or Catedral de Nuestra Señora de los Remedios (Santa Iglesia Catedral de San Cristóbal de La Laguna in Spanish) is a Roman Catholic church in Tenerife, Spain.

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La Madre Mountains Wilderness

La Madre Mountain Wilderness Area consists of covering a part of Clark County, Nevada, that lies just west of the city of Las Vegas, between that city and Mount Charleston.

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La Marche (cave)

La Marche is a cave and archaeological site located in Lussac-les-Châteaux, a commune in the department of Vienne, western France.

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La Milpa

La Milpa is an archaeological site and an ancient Maya city within the Three River region of Northwest Belize bordering Mexico and Guatemala.

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La Motte, Jersey

La Motte is a tidal island, and listed archaeological site, also known as Green Island, located in the Vingtaine de Samarès in the parish of St Clement on the south-east coast of Jersey, Channel Islands.

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La Perouse Bay

La Perouse Bay or Keoneʻoʻio Bay is located south of the town of Wailea, Hawaii at the end of Makena Alanui Road (State Highway 31) at.

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La Placita, Colorado

La Placita was a small 1890s Hispanic settlement located in southeastern Colorado in the Purgatoire River Valley.

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La Plata Museum

The La Plata Museum is a natural history museum in La Plata, Argentina.

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La Quemada

La Quemada is an archeological site, also known (according to different versions) as Chicomóztoc.

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La Tène culture

The La Tène culture was a European Iron Age culture named after the archaeological site of La Tène on the north side of Lake Neuchâtel in Switzerland, where thousands of objects had been deposited in the lake, as was discovered after the water level dropped in 1857.

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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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La Vénus d'Ille

La Vénus d'Ille is a short story by Prosper Mérimée.

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Laïla Nehmé

Laïla Nehmé (born 1966) is a Lebanese-French archaeologist.

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Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research

The Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research (LTRR) was established in 1937 by A.E. Douglass, founder of the modern science of dendrochronology.

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Laboring Sons Memorial Grounds

The Laboring Sons Memorial Grounds is a memorial ground in Frederick, Maryland located between 5th and 6th Street on Chapel Alley.

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Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa

The Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa (called Waaswaaganing in Ojibwe) are a federally recognized Ojibwa Native American tribe, with an Indian reservation lying mostly in the Town of Lac du Flambeau in south-western Vilas County, and in the Town of Sherman in south-eastern Iron County in the U.S. state of Wisconsin.

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Lac-Mégantic, Quebec

Lac-Mégantic is a town in the Eastern Townships region of Quebec, Canada.

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Lactose intolerance

Lactose intolerance is a condition in which people have symptoms due to the decreased ability to digest lactose, a sugar found in dairy products.

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Ladbech

Ladbech is a railway town and archaeological site in northern Tunisia.

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Ladislav Holý

Ladislav Holý (1933–1997) was a Czech anthropologist and Africanist of the British school of social anthropology.

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Lady of Elche

The Lady of Elche or Lady of Elx is a limestone bust that was discovered in 1897 at L'Alcúdia, an archaeological site on a private estate two kilometers south of Elche, Spain.

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Laeca Burn

Laeca Burn is a stream in northeastern Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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Laguna de Santa Rosa

The Laguna de Santa Rosa is a wetland complex that drains a watershed encompassing most of the Santa Rosa Plain in Sonoma County, California, USA.

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Laguna Plata Archeological District

The Laguna Plata Archeological District is a historic district in Lea County, New Mexico, near Hobbs, New Mexico, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.

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Lahn

| The Lahn is a -long, right (or eastern) tributary of the Rhine in Germany.

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Lajia

Lajia is an archaeological site located in Minhe County, Haidong Prefecture in Northwest China's Qinghai province.

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Lake Calumet

Lake Calumet is the largest body of water within the city of Chicago.

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Lake Champlain Maritime Museum

With facilities open to the public May through mid-October, the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum (LCMM) is non-profit museum located in Vergennes, Vermont, USA.

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Lake Constance

Lake Constance (Bodensee) is a lake on the Rhine at the northern foot of the Alps, and consists of three bodies of water: the Obersee or Upper Lake Constance, the Untersee or Lower Lake Constance, and a connecting stretch of the Rhine, called the Seerhein.

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Lake Hell 'n Blazes

Lake Hell 'n Blazes is on the upper reaches of the St. Johns River in Brevard County, Florida, United States, about southwest of Melbourne.

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Lake Herrera

Lake Herrera is a small lake located at from the urban centre of Mosquera and about north of the capital Bogotá in Cundinamarca, Colombia.

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Lake Ilo National Wildlife Refuge

Lake Ilo National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) is located in the U.S. state of North Dakota and is managed from Audubon National Wildlife Refuge by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

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Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park

Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park (8LE1) is one of the most important archaeological sites in Florida, the capital of chiefdom and ceremonial center of the Fort Walton Culture inhabited from 1050–1500.

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Lake Keowee

Lake Keowee is a man–made reservoir in the United States in the state of South Carolina.

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Lake Minnewanka

Lake Minnewanka ("Water of the Spirits" in Nakoda) is a glacial lake located in the eastern area of Banff National Park in Canada, about northeast of the Banff townsite.

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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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Lake Qaraoun

Lake Qaraoun (بحيرة القرعون / ALA-LC: Buḥayrat al-Qara‘ūn) is an artificial lake or reservoir located in the southern region of the Beqaa Valley, Lebanon.

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Lake Scott State Park

Lake Scott State Park is a Kansas state park in Scott County, Kansas in the United States.

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Lake Seminole

Lake Seminole is a reservoir located in the southwest corner of Georgia along its border with Florida, maintained by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

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Lambayeque, Peru

Lambayeque is a city in the Lambayeque region of northern Peru.

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Lambrusco

Lambrusco is the name of both an Italian red wine grape and a wine made principally from the grape.

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Lamel Hill

Lamel Hill is a scheduled monument about south-east of the centre of York, England.

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Lamella (materials)

A lamella (plural lamellae) is a small plate or flake, from the Latin, and may also be used to refer to collections of fine sheets of material held adjacent to one another, in a gill-shaped structure, often with fluid in between though sometimes simply a set of 'welded' plates.

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Lamoka Lake

Lamoka Lake, previously known as Mud Lake, is a small crescent-shaped lake in the western part of New York state.

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Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society

The Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society is a historical society and a registered charity (No. 1105708).

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Lancaster Castle

Lancaster Castle is a medieval castle in Lancaster in the English county of Lancashire.

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Land of the Minotaur

Land of the Minotaur (UK title: The Devil’s Men) is a 1976 Greek horror film directed by Kostas Karagiannis.

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Landmark Inn State Historic Site

The Landmark Inn State Historic Site is a historic inn in Castroville, Texas, United States.

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Landscape

A landscape is the visible features of an area of land, its landforms and how they integrate with natural or man-made features.

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Landscape archaeology

Landscape archaeology is the study of the ways in which people in the past constructed and used the environment around them.

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Landscape mythology

Landscape mythology and anthropology of landscape (Landschaftsmythologie, Landschaftsethnologie) are terms for a field of study advocated since about 1990 by Kurt Derungs (born 1962 in St. Gallen, Switzerland).

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LandSerf

LandSerf is a free geographic information system for editing, processing and visualizing spatial data.

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Langdon Warner

Langdon Warner (1881–1955) was an American archaeologist and art historian specializing in East Asian art.

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Langenbach, Kusel

Langenbach in the Palatinate is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Langevin family

The Langevin family is a French family with some illustrious scientists.

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Langweiler, Kusel

Langweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Lanier Theological Library

Lanier Theological Library (LTL) is a 17,000 sq.

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Lankester Merrin

Father Lankester Merrin is a fictional character in the novel The Exorcist (1971), one of the two main protagonists in the 1973 film adaptation, and several sequel films.

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Lansing Man

Lansing Man is the name commonly given to a collection of human remains dug up in the loess banks of the Missouri River near Lansing, Kansas in February 1902.

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Lapidarium

A lapidarium is a place where stone (Latin: lapis) monuments and fragments of archaeological interest are exhibited.

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Lapis Niger

The Lapis Niger (Latin, "Black Stone") is an ancient shrine in the Roman Forum.

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Lapu-Lapu

Lapu-Lapu (Baybayin:, Abecedario: Lápú-Lápú) (fl. 1521) was a ruler of Mactan in the Visayas.

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Lara Croft

Lara Croft is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the video game franchise Tomb Raider.

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Lara Croft and the Guardian of Light

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Large Stone Structure

The Large Stone Structure (Mivne haEven haGadol) is the name given to the remains of a large public building in the City of David neighborhood of central Jerusalem, south of the Old City, tentatively dated to tenth to ninth century BC.

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Larisa (Troad)

Larisa (Larisa) was an ancient Greek city in the south-west of the Troad region of Anatolia.

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Larissa Kelly

Larissa Kelly (born February 10, 1980) is an American multiple Jeopardy! winner, currently resident in Richmond, California.

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Larissa, Turkey

Larissa or Larisa (Λάρισα) Phrikonis is a Bronze Age city in the Aegean Region of Turkey.

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Lars Tharp

Lars Broholm Tharp (born 27 March 1954, Copenhagen, Denmark)'', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 23 September 2011).

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Lars Widenfalk

Lars Widenfalk (July 31, 1954 in Sveg, Härjedalen in Sweden) is a Swedish artist who works as a sculptor, alternately in Sweden, the Czech Republic and Italy.

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Las Cruces, New Mexico

Las Cruces, also known as "The City of the Crosses", is the seat of Doña Ana County, New Mexico, United States.

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Las Vegas culture (archaeology)

The Las Vegas culture is the name given to a large number of Holocene settlements which flourished between 8000 BCE and 4600 BCE.(10,000 to 6,600 BP) near the coast of present-day Ecuador.

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Laser scanning

In modern surveying, the general meaning of laser scanning is the controlled deflection of laser beams, visible or invisible.

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Laser scanning at Stonehenge

The first use of 3D laser scanning at Stonehenge was of the Bronze Age dagger and axes inscribed on the sarsens, which was undertaken in 2002 by a team from Wessex Archaeology and Archaeoptics.

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Laskill

Laskill is a small hamlet in Bilsdale, 5 miles (8 km) north-west of Helmsley, North Yorkshire, England, on the road from Helmsley to Stokesley and is located within the North York Moors National Park.

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Last Supper

The Last Supper is the final meal that, in the Gospel accounts, Jesus shared with his Apostles in Jerusalem before his crucifixion.

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Late Antique and medieval mosaics in Italy

Italy has the richest concentration of Late Antique and medieval mosaics in the world.

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Latin American Antiquity

Latin American Antiquity is a professional journal published by the Society for American Archaeology, the largest organization of professional archaeologists of the Americas in the world.

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Latin American cuisine

Latin American cuisine is the typical foods, beverages, and cooking styles common to many of the countries and cultures in Latin America.

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Latin American social archaeology

Latin American Social Archaeology (LASA) is a school of thought developed in Latin America in the 1970s and 1980s, focusing on the application of historical materialism to the interpretation of the archaeological record.

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Laudert

Laudert is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Laufersweiler

Laufersweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Laupheim

Laupheim is a city in southern Germany in the state of Baden-Württemberg.

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Laurence Keen

Laurence Keen, is a British archaeologist, historian, author and art expert.

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Laurentian language

Laurentian, or St.

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Laurentian University

Laurentian University (Université Laurentienne), which was incorporated on March 28, 1960, is a mid-sized bilingual university in Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.

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Laurette Séjourné

Laurette Séjourné (October 19, 1911 – May 25, 2003) was a Mexican archeologist and ethnologist best known for her study of the civilizations of Teotihuacan and the Aztecs and her theories concerning the Mesoamerican culture hero, Quetzalcoatl.

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Lauriston Sharp

Lauriston Sharp (March 24, 1907 – December 31, 1993) was a Goldwin Smith Professor of Anthropology and Asian Studies at Cornell University.

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Lauterecken

Lauterecken is a town in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Lautertal Limes

The Lautertal Limes (in German also: Sibyllenspur or Sybillenspur) is a Roman limes of the early 2nd century which is located between the River Neckar and the Swabian Jura.

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Lautzenhausen

Lautzenhausen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Lavreotiki

Lavreotiki is a municipality at the southeasternnmost tip of the Attica peninsula in the Greek regional unit of East Attica.

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Law of superposition

The law of superposition is an axiom that forms one of the bases of the sciences of geology, archaeology, and other fields dealing with geological stratigraphy.

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Lawrence Foanaota

Lawrence Foanaota OBE, born on Malaita, is a Solomon Islander archaeologist.

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Lawrence Holland

Lawrence Holland is an American game designer and founder of the now defunct Totally Games.

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Lawrence Stager

Lawrence E. "Larry" Stager (January 5, 1943 – December 29, 2017) was an American archaeologist and academic, specialising in Syro-Palestinian archaeology and Biblical archaeology.

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Layla Salih

Layla Salih (born 1975) is an Iraqi archaeologist.

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Laysan

Laysan (Hawaiian: Kauō), located northwest of Honolulu at N25° 42' 14" W171° 44' 04", is one of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.

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L’Enrajolada Santacana House-Museum

The L’Enrajolada Santacana House-Museum ((L'Enrajolada, Casa Museu Santacana), in Martorell (Baix Llobregat), is one of the oldest museums in Catalonia. It was founded in 1876 by Francesc Santacana i Campmany (1810-1896) and then taken over by his grandson, Francesc Santacana i Romeu (1883-1936). It is located in an old private residence with four floors and a garden, which belonged to the Santacana family. L'Enrajolada is part of the Barcelona Provincial Council Local Museum Network.

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Léon Diguet

Léon Diguet (25 July 1859, Le Havre – 31 August 1926, Paris) was a French naturalist.

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Léon Faucher

Léonard Joseph (Léon) Faucher (8 September 1803 – 14 December 1854) was a French politician and economist.

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Léon Renier

Charles Alphonse Leon Renier (2 May 1809, Charleville – 11 June 1885, Paris) was a 20th-century French historian specialist of Latin epigraphy.

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Léon-Eugène Méhédin

Léon-Eugène Méhédin (21 February 1828, L'Aigle – 4 March 1905, Bonsecours) was a French archaeologist, architect and photographer.

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Léopold Victor Delisle

Léopold Victor Delisle (24 October 1826, Valognes (Manche) – 21 July 1910, Chantilly, Oise), was a French bibliophile and historian.

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Löllbach

Löllbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Løten

Løten is a municipality in Hedmark county, Norway.

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Le Tholonet

Le Tholonet (Lou Toulounet and Lo Tolonet in Provençal) is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in southern France.

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Leakey family

The Leakey family is a British and Kenyan family consisting of a number of notable military figures and archaeologists of the 20th and 21st centuries.

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Leary Site

Leary Site, also known as 25-RH-1 or Leary-Kelly Site is an archaeological site near Rulo, Nebraska and the Big Nemaha River.

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Leaverite

Leaverite is a slang term used by geologists, mineralogists, archaeologists, and amateur rock collectors to identify a specimen in the field that may look interesting but is actually not.

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Lech-Lecha

Lech-Lecha, Lekh-Lekha, or Lech-L'cha (leḵ-ləḵā — Hebrew for "go!" or "leave!", literally "go for you" — the fifth and sixth words in the parashah) is the third weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.

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Leckie Broch

Leckie Broch is an iron-age broch located in Stirlingshire, Scotland.

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Lee Rogers Berger

Lee Rogers Berger (born December 22, 1965) is an American-born South African paleoanthropologist and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence.

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Lee State Park

Lee State Park, formerly Lee State Natural Area, is a state park located near the town of Bishopville in Lee County, South Carolina along the Lynches River.

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Leeds City Museum

Leeds City Museum, originally established in 1819, reopened on 13 September 2008 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England.

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Leen Ritmeyer

Leen Ritmeyer is a Dutch-born archaeological architect who currently lives and works in Wales, after having spent 22 years (1967–89) in Jerusalem.

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Legends of Africa

Shango was the fourth king of the Oyo clan in Yorubaland who brought prosperity to the Empire he inherited.

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Lego Island

Lego Island is a Lego-themed action-adventure video game developed and published by Mindscape, and released for Microsoft Windows, worldwide, on September 26, 1997.

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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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Leiden University Library

Leiden University Library is a library founded in 1575 in Leiden, Netherlands.

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Leif Erikson

Leif Erikson or Leif Ericson (970 – c. 1020) was a Norse explorer from Iceland.

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Leila Badre

Leila Badre (born 20 February 1943) is a Syrian and Lebanese archaeologist and director of the Archaeological Museum of the American University of Beirut.

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Leila Clement Spaulding

Leila Clement Spaulding was an American classicist and archaeologist who taught Greek at Vassar College (1903-1907), lectured in art and archaeology at Bryn Mawr College and was Assistant Professor of Classics at Colorado College 1911-1914.

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Lelantine War

The Lelantine War is the modern name for a military conflict between the two ancient Greek city states Chalcis and Eretria in Euboea which took place in the early Archaic period, between c. 710 and 650 BC.

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Lemnos

Lemnos (Λήμνος) is a Greek island in the northern part of the Aegean Sea.

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Lempa, Cyprus

Lempa (Λέμπα, Çıralı or Lemba) is a village in Cyprus located approximately 4 km (2.5 mi) north of the town of Paphos.

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Lenape

The Lenape, also called the Leni Lenape, Lenni Lenape and Delaware people, are an indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands, who live in Canada and the United States.

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Lenggong

Lenggong (Simplified Chinese: 玲珑; Traditional Chinese: 玲瓏) is a town, a mukim and a parliamentary constituency in Hulu Perak District, Perak, Malaysia.

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Leo Frobenius

Leo Viktor Frobenius (29 June 1873 – 9 August 1938) was an ethnologist and archaeologist and a major figure in German ethnography.

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Leo Klejn

Lev Samuilovich Kleyn (born 1 July 1927), better known in English as Leo Klejn, is a Russian archaeologist, anthropologist and philologist.

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Leon Jooste

Leon Jooste (born 18 February 1969 in Grootfontein, Otjozondjupa Region) is a Namibian politician and businessperson.

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Leon Kozłowski

Leon Tadeusz Kozłowski (6 June 1892 – 11 May 1944) was a Polish archaeologist and politician who served as Prime Minister of Poland from 1934 to 1935, before being convicted and sentenced to death for Treason during World War II.

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Leona River

The Leona River is a river in Texas.

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Leonard Hussey

Leonard Duncan Albert Hussey, OBE (6 June 1891 – 25 February 1964) was an English meteorologist, archaeologist, explorer, medical doctor and member of Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic and Shackleton–Rowett Expeditions.

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Leonard William King

Leonard William King, F.S.A. (8 December 1869 – 20 August 1919) was an English archaeologist and Assyriologist educated at Rugby School and King's College in Cambridge.

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Leonard Woolley

Sir Charles Leonard Woolley (17 April 1880 – 20 February 1960) was a British archaeologist best known for his excavations at Ur in Mesopotamia.

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Leonardo López Luján

Leonardo Náuhmitl López Luján (born in Mexico City, 31 March 1964) is an archaeologist and one of the leading researchers of pre-Hispanic Central Mexican societies and the history of archaeology in Mexico.

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Leonardo Patterson

Leonardo Patterson (born c. 1942) is a colourful and controversial antiquities dealer who specialises in Pre-Columbian artefacts.

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Leopold Krakauer

Leopold Krakauer (March 1890 – December 1954) was an architect and a painter.

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Leopoldo Batres

Leopoldo Batres (Ciudad de México, 1852–1926) was a pioneer of the archaeology of Mexico.

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Leopoldo Cicognara

Count Leopoldo Cicognara (17 November 1767, in Ferrara – 5 March 1834, in Venice) was an Italian archaeologist, collector and art historian.

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Leroy Waterman

Leroy Waterman (July 4, 1875 – May 9, 1972) was a professor of Oriental Languages and Literature at the University of Michigan, an archaeologist of the Middle East, an Old Testament scholar, a translator of the Revised Standard Version Old Testament, and a proponent of a distinctive interpretation of the Christian faith.

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Leslie Grinsell

Leslie Valentine Grinsell (14 February 1907 – 28 February 1995) was an English archaeologist.

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Leslie Peter Wenham

Leslie Peter Wenham MA, M.Litt, M.Ed,"Obituary - Leslie Peter Wenham", The Antiquaries Journal 70, 528 FSA (1911 - 29 January 1990) was a British archaeologist, historian, and professor who excavated in York, on Hadrian's Wall and Malton.

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Leslie R. H. Willis

Leslie R. H. Willis (13 July 1908 – 12 March 1984) was an English mechanical and electrical engineer and archaeologist, who excavated the Iron Age settlement at Dainton, Devon in the late 1940s.

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Leslie Spier

Leslie Spier (December 13, 1893 – December 3, 1961) was an American anthropologist best known for his ethnographic studies of American Indians.

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Leslie Van Gelder

Leslie Van Gelder (born January 27, 1969) is an American archaeologist, writer, and educator whose primary work involves the study of Paleolithic Finger Flutings in Rouffignac Cave and Gargas Cave in Southern France.

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Lesser Antillean macaw

The Lesser Antillean macaw or Guadeloupe macaw (Ara guadeloupensis) is a hypothetical extinct species of macaw that is thought to have been endemic to the Lesser Antillean island region of Guadeloupe.

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Lest Darkness Fall

Lest Darkness Fall is an alternate history science fiction novel written in 1939 by author L. Sprague de Camp.

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Letchworth-Love Mounds Archaeological State Park

Letchworth Mounds Archaeological State Park is a 188.2 acre Florida State Park that preserves the state's tallest prehistoric, Native American ceremonial earthwork mound, which is high.

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Letoon

The Letoon (Λητῶον), sometimes Latinized as Letoum, was a sanctuary of Leto near the ancient city Xanthos in Lycia.

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Letoon trilingual

The Letoon trilingual is an inscription in three languages: standard Lycian or Lycian A, Greek and Aramaic covering the faces of a four-sided stone stele called the Letoon Trilingual Stele, discovered in 1973 during the archeological exploration of the Letoon temple complex, near Xanthos, ancient Lycia, in present-day Turkey.

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Letters from Iwo Jima

is a 2006 Japanese-American war film directed and co-produced by Clint Eastwood, starring Ken Watanabe and Kazunari Ninomiya.

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Levallois technique

The Levallois technique is a name given by archaeologists to a distinctive type of stone knapping developed by precursors to modern humans during the Palaeolithic period.

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Levantine archaeology

Levantine archaeology is the archaeological study of the Levant.

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Levantine corridor

The Levantine corridor is the relatively narrow strip between the Mediterranean Sea to the northwest and deserts to the southeast which connects Africa to Eurasia.

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Level 7 (novel)

Level 7 is a 1959 science fiction novel by the Ukrainian-born Israeli writer Mordecai Roshwald.

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Level Up (UK TV series)

Level Up was a UK children's TV programme that was broadcast on CBBC.

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Lewes

Lewes is the county town of East Sussex and formerly all of Sussex.

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Lewis

Lewis (Leòdhas,, also Isle of Lewis) is the northern part of Lewis and Harris, the largest island of the Western Isles or Outer Hebrides archipelago in Scotland.

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Lewis and Clark Lake

Lewis and Clark Lake is a large reservoir on the Missouri River impounded by Gavins Point Dam, on the border of the U.S. States of Nebraska and South Dakota in the United States.

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Lewis Binford

Lewis Roberts Binford (November 21, 1931 – April 11, 2011) was an American archaeologist known for his influential work in archaeological theory, ethnoarchaeology and the Paleolithic period.

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Lewistown, Illinois

Lewistown is a city in Fulton County, Illinois, United States.

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Ley line

Ley lines are apparent alignments of land forms, places of ancient religious significance or culture, often including man-made structures.

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LGBT history

LGBT history dates back to the first recorded instances of same-sex love and sexuality of ancient civilizations, involving the history of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, and transgender (LGBT) peoples and cultures around the world.

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Li Jian (art curator)

Li Jian is the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Curator of East Asian Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.

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Li Liu (archaeologist)

Li Liu (born December 12, 1953) is a Chinese-American archaeologist most well known for her work on Neolithic and Bronze Age Chinese archaeology.

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Li Long Lam

Li Long Lam is an archaeologist in Hong Kong.

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Liang Sicheng

Liang Sicheng (20 April 1901 – 9 January 1972) was a Chinese architect and scholar, often known as the father of modern Chinese architecture.

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Liang Siyong

Liang Siyong (13 November 1904 2 April 1954) was a Chinese archaeologist.

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Liao civilization

The Liao Civilization or Liao River Civilization, named after the Liao river, is an ancient Chinese civilization that originated in the southern part of Manchuria, in the northeastern Liao basin of China.

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Liaoning bronze dagger culture

The Liaoning bronze dagger culture is an archeological complex of the late Bronze Age in Korea and China.

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Libellus

A libellus (plural libelli) in the Roman Empire was any brief document written on individual pages (as opposed to scrolls or tablets), particularly official documents issued by governmental authorities.

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Library of Ashurbanipal

The Royal Library of Ashurbanipal, named after Ashurbanipal, the last great king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, is a collection of thousands of clay tablets and fragments containing texts of all kinds from the 7th century BC.

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Library of Birmingham

The Library of Birmingham is a public library in Birmingham, England.

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Liceo Classico Quinto Orazio Flacco

Liceo Classico “Quinto Orazio Flacco” is the oldest institution for secondary education in the city of Bari, Apulia.

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Lichen

A lichen is a composite organism that arises from algae or cyanobacteria living among filaments of multiple fungi in a symbiotic relationship.

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Lichenometry

In archaeology, palaeontology, and geomorphology, lichenometry is a geomorphic method of geochronologic dating that uses lichen growth to determine the age of exposed rock, based on a presumed specific rate of increase in radial size over time.

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Lidar

Lidar (also called LIDAR, LiDAR, and LADAR) is a surveying method that measures distance to a target by illuminating the target with pulsed laser light and measuring the reflected pulses with a sensor.

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Lidiano Bacchielli

Lidiano Bacchielli (July 30, 1947 in Urbino – June 8, 1996 in Milan) was an Italian archaeologist, specializing in the ancient north African region of Cyrenaica.

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Liebenstein Castle (Saxony)

Liebenstein Castle (Raubschloss Liebenstein) is a ruined castle on a rocky hill spur in the Schwarzwassertal valley near Pobershau.

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Lieser, Germany

Lieser is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Lieshout

Lieshout is a small village located in the province of North Brabant in the south of the Netherlands, about 15 kilometres northeast of Eindhoven.

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Lighthouse of Alexandria

The Lighthouse of Alexandria, sometimes called the Pharos of Alexandria (Ancient Greek: ὁ Φάρος τῆς Ἀλεξανδρείας, contemporary Koine), was a lighthouse built by the Ptolemaic Kingdom, during the reign Ptolemy II Philadelphus (280–247 BC) which has been estimated to be in overall height.

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Lilleshall Abbey

Lilleshall Abbey was an Augustinian abbey in Shropshire, England, today located 6 miles north of Telford.

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Lily Chitty

Lily Frances "Lal" Chitty, (20 March 1893 – 8 February 1979) was a British archaeologist and independent scholar, who specialised in the prehistoric archaeology of Wales and the west of England.

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Lima Region

Lima Region is located in the central coast of the country, its regional seat (capital city) is Huacho.

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Limassol

Limassol (Λεμεσός; Limasol or Leymosun) is a city on the southern coast of Cyprus and capital of the eponymous district.

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Limeuil (prehistoric site)

Limeuil is a prehistoric site in the French departement Dordogne.

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Limpopo

Limpopo is the northernmost province of South Africa.

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Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial

Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial is a United States Presidential Memorial, a National Historic Landmark District in present-day Lincoln City, Indiana.

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Lincoln MacVeagh

Lincoln MacVeagh (1890–1972) was a distinguished United States soldier, diplomat, businessman, and archaeologist.

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Lincoln Parish, Louisiana

Lincoln Parish (French: Paroisse de Lincoln) is a parish located in the U.S. state of Louisiana.

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Lincoln Trail Homestead State Memorial

The Lincoln Trail Homestead State Memorial is a state park located on the Sangamon River in Macon County near Harristown, Illinois, United States.

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Linda Braidwood

Linda Schreiber Braidwood (October 9, 1909 – January 15, 2003) was an American archaeologist and pre-historian.

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Linda Hulin

Linda Hulin is a lecturer in Archaeology in Magdalen College, Oxford, a research officer at the Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology and a Supernumerary Fellow of Harris Manchester College, Oxford.

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Lindholm Høje

Lindholm Høje (Lindholm Hills, from Old Norse haugr, hill or mound) is a major Viking burial site and former settlement situated to the north of and overlooking the city of Aalborg in Denmark.

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Lindos

Lindos (Λίνδος) is an archaeological site, a fishing village and a former municipality on the island of Rhodes, in the Dodecanese, Greece.

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Lindsay Allason-Jones

Lindsay Allason-Jones, is a British archaeologist and museum professional specialising in Roman material culture, Hadrian's Wall, Roman Britain, and the presence and role of women in the Roman Empire.

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Lindsey Davis

Lindsey Davis (born 1949) is an English historical novelist, best known as the author of the Falco series of historical crime stories set in ancient Rome and its empire.

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Line C (Rome Metro)

Line C is a Rome Metro line which runs from Monte Compatri-Pantano in the eastern suburbs of Rome to San Giovanni near the city centre where it meets Line A. It is the third metro line to be built in the city and the first to be fully automated.

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Lis Jacobsen

Elisabeth (Lis) Jacobsen, née Rubin, (1882–1961) was a Danish philologist, archaeologist and writer.

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List of academic databases and search engines

This page contains a representative list of major databases and search engines useful in an academic setting for finding and accessing articles in academic journals, repositories, archives, or other collections of scientific and other articles.

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List of Advanced Level subjects

This is a list of Advanced Level (usually referred to as A-Level) subjects.

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List of Adventures in Odyssey characters

The following is a partial list of characters from the radio program Adventures in Odyssey.

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List of alternate history fiction

This is a list of alternate history fiction, sorted by type.

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List of alumni of the University of York

This is a list of alumni of the University of York, listed in alphabetical order by surname.

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List of archaeological periods (Levant)

The following is a refined listing of Levantive archeological periods, expanded from the basic three-age system with finer subdivisions and extension into the modern historical period.

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List of archaeological sites in Taiwan

This list of archaeological sites in Taiwan encompasses sites that have either contributed substantially or have the potential to contribute substantially to research regarding people who have lived in Taiwan since prehistoric times.

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List of archaeologists

This is a list of archaeologists – people who study or practise archaeology, the study of the human past through material remains.

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List of autodidacts

This is a list of notable autodidacts which includes people who have been partially or wholly self-taught.

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List of Azerbaijani scientists and philosophers

This is a comprehensive list of notable Azerbaijani scientists and philosophers, arranged alphabetically.

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List of Banaras Hindu University people

The list of Banaras University people includes notable graduates, professors and administrators affiliated with Banaras Hindu University in Varanasi.

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List of Barnard College people

The following is a list of notable individuals associated with Barnard College through attendance as a student, service as a member of the faculty or staff, or award of the Barnard Medal of Distinction.

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List of Beyblade characters

This list includes characters from the original Beyblade series.

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List of Bones characters

This is a list of fictional characters in the television series Bones.

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List of Boy Meets World characters

Boy Meets World is an American television sitcom that chronicles the coming of age events and everyday life-lessons of Cory Matthews (Ben Savage).

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List of Bronze Age hoards in Great Britain

The list of Bronze Age hoards in Britain comprises significant archaeological hoards of jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) that are associated with the British Bronze Age, approximately 2700 BC to 8th century BC.

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List of burial mounds in the United States

This is a list of notable burial mounds in the United States built by Native Americans.

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List of burials in the Valley of the Kings

The following is a list of burials in the Valley of the Kings, in Thebes (modern Luxor in Egypt) and nearby areas.

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List of Cairo University alumni

Notable alumni and attendees of Cairo University are listed here, first by decade of their graduation (or last attendance) and then alphabetically.

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List of Cardcaptor Sakura characters

This article covers the major characters of Clamp's manga Cardcaptor Sakura and its respective anime and movies.

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List of Cardcaptor Sakura episodes

The 70-episode Cardcaptor Sakura Japanese anime television series is based on the manga series written and illustrated by the manga artist group Clamp.

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List of cartographers

Cartography is the study of map making and cartographers are map makers.

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List of castles in Somerset

This is a list of castles in the ceremonial county of Somerset, England.

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List of caves in Austria

The following article shows a list of caves in Austria.

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List of caves in Italy

The following article shows a list of caves in Italy.

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List of caves in Mexico

This is a list of caves in Mexico (not just archaeological).

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List of Chinese cultural relics forbidden to be exhibited abroad

The list of Chinese cultural relics forbidden to be exhibited abroad comprises a list of antiquities and archaeological artefacts held by various museums and other institutions in the People's Republic of China, which the Chinese government has officially prohibited, since 2003, from being taken abroad for exhibition.

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List of Chinese inventions

China has been the source of many innovations, scientific discoveries and inventions.

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List of Christ myth theory proponents

This is a partial list of people who have been categorized as Christ myth theory proponents, the belief that "the historical Jesus did not exist.

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List of Christians in science and technology

This is a list of Christians in science and technology.

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List of Columbia College people

The following list contains only notable graduates and former students of Columbia College, the undergraduate liberal arts division of Columbia University, and its predecessor, from 1754 to 1776, King's College.

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List of converts to Islam

The following is an incomplete list of notable people who converted to Islam from a different religion or no religion.

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List of Danes

This is a list of notable Danish people.

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List of deemed universities

This is a list of deemed universities in India established under Section 3 of UGC Act, 1956.

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List of Demonbane characters

This is a list of characters from the visual novel, anime, and manga series Demonbane, which incorporates elements of mecha and the Cthulhu Mythos.

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List of Deshastha Brahmins

Deshastha Brahmins form a major sub-caste of Brahmins in the states of Maharashtra and parts of Karnataka in India.

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List of Doc Savage characters

Starting with the first Doc Savage story in 1933 and running throughout the pulp adventures a group of recurring characters appeared either as Doc's supporting cast or antagonists.

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List of Dutch politicians with doctorates

This is a list of notable Dutch politicians who have a research doctorate.

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List of Eagle Scouts

Eagle Scout is the highest rank attainable in the Boy Scouting program division of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA).

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List of Egyptologists

This is a partial list of Egyptologists.

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List of Elseworlds publications

This is a list of Elseworlds publications from DC Comics, separated by main character, and in alphabetical order by title.

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List of environmental organisations topics

This is a list of topics on which environmental organizations focus.

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List of fictional professors

This is a list of professors appearing throughout fiction.

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List of fictional scientists and engineers

In addition to the archetypical mad scientist, western culture depicts scientists and engineers who go above and beyond the regular demands of their professions to use their skills and knowledge for the betterment of others, often at great personal risk.

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List of fields of doctoral studies in the United States

This is the list of the fields of doctoral studies in the United States used for the annual Survey of Earned Doctorates, conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago for the National Science Foundation and other federal agencies, as used for the 2015 survey.

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List of Foreign Archaeological Institutes in Greece

There are 19 Foreign Archaeological Institutions in Greece.

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List of Foundation universe planets

This is a list of Foundation universe planets featured or mentioned in the ''Robot'' series, ''Empire'' series, and ''Foundation'' series created by Isaac Asimov.

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List of George Washington University alumni

This is a list of notable alumni of the George Washington University.

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List of German inventors and discoverers

---- This is a list of German inventors and discoverers.

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List of Germans

This is a list of notable Germans or German-speaking or -writing persons.

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List of Greek and Latin roots in English/A

Category:Lists of words.

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List of Greek morphemes used in English

Greek morphemes are parts of words originating from the Greek language.

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List of Heidelberg University people

Alumni and faculty of the university include many founders and pioneers of academic disciplines, and a large number of internationally acclaimed philosophers, poets, jurisprudents, theologians, natural and social scientists.

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List of higher education institutions in Maharashtra

In Maharashtra there are one central university, twenty three state universities and twenty-one deemed universities.

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List of hillforts and ancient settlements in Somerset

Somerset is a ceremonial county in South West England.

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List of Hillsdale College alumni

This is a list of notable Hillsdale College alumni.

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List of Hindu temples in Indonesia

This is a list of Hindu temples and their remains in Indonesia.

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List of hoards in Asia

The list of hoards in Asia comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in Asia.

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List of hoards in Great Britain

The list of hoards in Britain comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales).

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List of hoards in Ireland

The list of hoards in Ireland comprises the significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, metal objects, scrap metal and other valuable items that have been discovered on the island of Ireland (Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland).

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List of hoards in Romania

This is a list of hoards in Romania which comprises the significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, metal objects, scrap metal and other valuable items that have been discovered in Romania.

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List of hoards in the Channel Islands

The list of hoards in the Channel Islands comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in the Channel Islands (Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, Sark, Herm and associated smaller islands).

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List of hoards in the Isle of Man

The list of hoards in the Isle of Man comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in the Isle of Man.

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List of Homestuck characters

Homestuck is a webcomic written, illustrated, and animated by Andrew Hussie as part of ''MS Paint Adventures'' (MSPA).

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List of Hopewell sites

This is a list of Hopewell sites.

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List of Ibis the Invincible enemies

During his career Ibis the Invincible, a Fawcett Comics superhero with magical powers, has met many foes.

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List of In Our Time programmes

In Our Time is a discussion programme on the history of ideas; it has been hosted since 1998 by Melvyn Bragg on BBC Radio 4 in the United Kingdom.

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List of Indian inventions and discoveries

This list of Indian inventions and discoveries details the inventions, scientific discoveries and contributions of ancient and modern India, including both the ancient and medieval nations in the subcontinent historically referred to as India and the modern Indian state.

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List of Indiana Jones characters

This is a list of characters in the ''Indiana Jones'' series.

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List of Irish artists

This list of Irish artists includes notable visual artists born or working mainly in Ireland along with a list of critics, collectors and curators who have had an influence on Irish visual arts.

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List of Iron Age hoards in Great Britain

The list of Iron Age hoards in Britain comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) that are associated with the British Iron Age, approximately 8th century BC to the 1st century AD.

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List of Iron Age states

The Iron Age is the period generally occurring after the Bronze Age, marked by the prevalent use of iron, circa 1200 BC to 600 BC.

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List of Israel Prize recipients

This is a complete list of recipients of the Israel Prize from the inception of the Prize in 1953 through 2017.

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List of Jackie Chan Adventures characters

This is a list of characters from the animated television series Jackie Chan Adventures.

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List of Jackie Chan Adventures episodes

This is a list of episodes of the television show Jackie Chan Adventures.

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List of Kamen Rider W characters

This is a list of characters of the 2009–2010 Japanese tokusatsu series Kamen Rider W.

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List of Kare Kano characters

This is a list of the main characters from the manga series Kare Kano and its anime adaptation.

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List of Kashmiri people

This is an incomplete list of notable persons of Kashmiri origin.

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List of Latin Americans

This is a list of notable Latin American people, in alphabetical order within categories.

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List of Légion d'honneur recipients by name (D)

The following is a list of some notable Légion d'honneur recipients by name.

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List of Lithuanians

This is a list of Lithuanians, both people of Lithuanian descent and people with the birthplace or citizenship of Lithuania.

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List of Love Hina characters

This is a list of fictional characters in the anime and manga series Love Hina created by Ken Akamatsu.

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List of Maltese people

This is a list of notable Maltese people including those not born in, or current residents of, Malta; they are Maltese nationals.

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List of Marvel Comics characters: R

Ti Asha Ra is a fictional alien in Marvel Comics.

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List of Masters of the Universe characters

The Masters of the Universe franchise debuted in 1982, the creation of American company Mattel.

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List of members of German student corps

List of notable or known members of German Student Corps.

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List of MeSH codes (I01)

The following is a list of the "I" codes for MeSH.

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List of mountains and hills of the Palatine Forest

This list of mountains and hills in the Palatine Forest contains a selection of the highest or more notable peaks located in the natural region of the Palatine Forest in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate (maximum). The mountain range is formed from a slab of Bunter sandstone, about 500 metres thick, that is characterized by a complex relief with deeply incised V-shaped valleys, many different hill shapes and dense forests.

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List of Muisca and pre-Muisca scholars

This list contains Muisca and pre-Muisca scholars; researchers, historians, archaeologists, anthropologists and other investigators who have contributed to the current knowledge of the Muisca and their ancestors of the prehistory of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense and of the preceramic and ceramic Herrera Periods.

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List of museums in Bristol

The city, unitary authority area and ceremonial county of Bristol contains a wide range of museums, defined here as institutions (including nonprofit organisations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.

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List of museums in Egypt

Egypt has one of the oldest civilizations in the world.

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List of museums in North Yorkshire

This list of museums in North Yorkshire, England contains museums which are defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.

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List of museums in Northern Cyprus

This is a list of museums within the cities of Northern Cyprus.

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List of museums in Province of Cremona

This is a list of museums in the Province of Cremona, Lombardy Region, Italy.

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List of museums in Puerto Rico

This list of museums in Puerto Rico contains museums which are defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.

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List of museums in Somerset

The English ceremonial county of Somerset contains a wide range of museums, defined here as institutions (including nonprofit organisations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.

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List of museums in South Dakota

This list of museums in South Dakota encompasses museums defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.

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List of My-HiME characters

This article is a list of fictional characters who appear in the My-HiME series.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Alaska

The National Historic Landmarks in Alaska represent Alaska's history from its Russian heritage to its statehood.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in California

This is a complete List of National Historic Landmarks in California.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Hawaii

This is a complete List of National Historic Landmarks in Hawaii.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Kansas

This is a list of all National Historic Landmarks designated by the U.S. government in Kansas.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Maine

This is a complete List of National Historic Landmarks in Maine.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Oregon

This is a complete List of National Historic Landmarks in Oregon.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in South Dakota

The List of National Historic Landmarks in South Dakota contains the landmarks designated by the U.S. Federal Government for the U.S. state of South Dakota.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Tennessee

Following is a list of sites and structures in Tennessee that have been designated National Historic Landmarks.

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Utah

This is a complete List of National Historic Landmarks in Utah.

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List of National Historic Sites of Canada in Alberta

This is a list of National Historic Sites (Lieux historiques nationaux) in the province of Alberta.

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List of National Historic Sites of Canada in New Brunswick

This is a list of National Historic Sites (Lieux historiques nationaux) in the province of New Brunswick.

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List of National Historic Sites of Canada in Quebec

This is a list of National Historic Sites (Lieux historiques nationaux) in the province of Quebec.

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List of National Monuments of the United States

There are 129 protected areas in the United States known as national monuments.

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List of National Trust properties in Somerset

The National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty (informally known as the National Trust) owns or manages a range of properties in the ceremonial county of Somerset, England.

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List of natural history dealers

Natural history specimen dealers had an important role in the development of science in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries.

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List of New Hampshire historical markers (201–225)

This is part of the list of New Hampshire historical markers.

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List of New Netherland placename etymologies

Nieuw-Nederland, or New Netherland, was the seventeenth-century colonial province of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands on northeastern coast of North America.

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List of northernmost items

This is a list of various northernmost things on earth.

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List of Occitans

This is a non-exhaustive list of people who were born in the Occitania historical territory (although it is difficult to know the exact boundaries), or notable people from other regions of France or Europe with Occitan roots, or notable people from other regions of France or Europe who have other significant links with the historical region.

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List of Old Carthusians

The following are notable Old Carthusians, who are former pupils of Charterhouse School (founded in 1611).

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List of Old Etonians born in the 19th century

The following notable old boys of Eton College were born in the 19th century.

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List of Old Etonians born in the 20th century

The following notable pupils of Eton College were born in the 20th century.

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List of Old Newingtonians

This is a List of notable Old Newingtonians, alumni of the GPS Uniting Church school Newington College in Sydney, Australia.

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List of Old Uppinghamians

Alumni of Uppingham School are known as Old Uppinghamians.

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List of Oriel College people

A list of notable people affiliated with Oriel College, Oxford University, England, including alumni, academics, provosts and honorary fellows.

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List of orphans and foundlings

Notable orphans and foundlings include world leaders, celebrated writers, entertainment greats, figures in science and business, as well as innumerable fictional characters in literature and comics.

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List of ovens

This is a list of ovens.

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List of Pakistan Movement activists

The Founders and activists of the Pakistan Movement, also known as Founding Fathers of Pakistan (Urdu:بانيڹ پاكستان; ''Romanization lit''.:bəŋɨaɪaɪ-e-Pəkɨstəŋ), were the political leaders and statespersons who participated in the success of the political movement, following the signing of the Pakistan Resolution, that led the establishment and creation of Pakistan on August 1947.

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List of paleontologists

This is a list of notable paleontologists who have made significant contributions to the field of paleontology.

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List of Pani Poni characters

This is a list of characters in Pani Poni.

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List of parks and gardens in Rome

This article gives an incomplete list of parks and gardens in Rome.

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List of people educated at Bedford School

This is a list of people educated at Bedford School.

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List of people educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh

The following is a list of notable former pupils of the Royal High School of Edinburgh, Scotland.

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List of people from Bremen

This article provides a list of people from the city of Bremen.

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List of people from Cincinnati

This is a list of notable residents of Cincinnati, Ohio.

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List of people from Cornwall

This is a list of people from Cornwall, a county of England in the United Kingdom.

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List of people from Jerusalem

This is a list of notable people who were born, lived or are/were famously associated with Jerusalem.

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List of people from Michigan

This is a list of notable people from the U.S. state of Michigan.

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List of people from San Juan, Puerto Rico

This is a list of notable people who were either born in San Juan, Puerto Rico or who were not born in San Juan, but who are or were longtime residents of the city.

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List of people from Tbilisi

This is a list of famous people who have lived in Tbilisi, including both natives and residents.

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List of people from the Lehigh Valley

The following is a list of notable people who were born, or who have lived a significant portion of their lives, in the Lehigh Valley, referred to informally and locally as The Valley, around Allentown, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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List of people from the London Borough of Newham

Among those who were born in the London Borough of Newham, or have dwelt within the borders of the modern borough, including Stratford, are (alphabetical order).

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List of people from Trieste

The Province of Trieste is a province in the autonomous Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of Italy.

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List of people from Yorkshire

This is a list of people from Yorkshire. Yorkshire is the largest historic county in both England and the United Kingdom.

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List of people who disappeared mysteriously

This is a list of people who disappeared mysteriously and of people whose current whereabouts are unknown or whose deaths are not substantiated.

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List of Planet of the Apes characters

The ''Planet of the Apes'' franchise contains many characters that appear in one or more works.

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List of Please Save My Earth characters

is a ''shōjo'' science fiction manga by Saki Hiwatari.

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List of pre-Columbian cultures

This list of pre-Columbian cultures includes those civilizations and cultures of the Americas which flourished prior to the European colonization of the Americas.

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List of Princeton University people

This list of notable people associated with Princeton University includes faculty, staff, graduates and former students in the undergraduate program and all graduate programs, and others affiliated with the University.

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List of Puerto Rican scientists and inventors

Before Christopher Columbus and the Spanish Conquistadors landed on the island of "Borikén" (Puerto Rico), the Tainos who inhabited the island depended on their astronomical observations for the cultivation of their crops.

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List of Puerto Ricans

This is a list of notable people from Puerto Rico which includes people who were born in Puerto Rico (Borinquen), people who are of full or partial Puerto Rican background.

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List of RahXephon characters

This is a list of recurring characters and cast in the anime/manga/novel series RahXephon.

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List of Roman hoards in Great Britain

The list of Roman hoards in Britain comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) that are associated with period of Romano-British culture when Southern Britain was under the control of the Roman Empire, from AD 43 until about 410, as well as the subsequent Sub-Roman period up to the establishment of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.

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List of Roman sites

The List of Roman sites is a link page for any Roman archaeological site.

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List of Russian historians

This list of Russian historians includes the famous historians, as well as archaeologists, paleographers, genealogists and other representatives of auxiliary historical disciplines from the Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, the Russian Empire and other predecessor states of Russia.

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List of scheduled monuments in North Somerset

North Somerset is a unitary authority area in England.

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List of scheduled monuments in Sedgemoor

Sedgemoor is a low-lying area of land in Somerset, England.

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List of scientific occupations

This is a list of science and science-related occupations, which include various scientific occupations, careers based upon scientific research disciplines and explorers.

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List of scientific publications by Jacques Cauvin

Professor Jacques Cauvin (1930 – 26 December 2001) was a French archaeologist who specialised in the prehistory of the Levant and Near East.

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List of settlements lost to floods in the Netherlands

This list of settlements lost to floods in the Netherlands is an adapted translation of from Dutch, plus some additions from other sources.

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List of Space Runaway Ideon episodes

This is a list of episodes for the anime Space Runaway Ideon.

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List of Star Trek characters

This article lists characters in the various canonical incarnations of Star Trek.

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List of Stargate SG-1 characters

Spanning ten years and several films, Stargate SG-1 developed an extensive and detailed backdrop of diverse characters.

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List of Stargate SG-1 episodes

Stargate SG-1 is a Canadian-American military science fiction television series created by Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner.

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List of Super Wings episodes

Super Wings is an animated television series co-produced by Funny-flux Entertainment in South Korea, Qianqi Animation in China, and Little Airplane Productions in the United States, with the production support from the Educational Broadcasting System and CJ E&M in South Korea, and additional support from KOCCA.

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List of Texas Tech University alumni

Texas Tech University, often referred to as Texas Tech or TTU, is a public, coeducational, research university located in Lubbock, Texas.

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List of The 39 Clues characters

This is the list of fictional and non-fictional characters who appeared in The 39 Clues franchise.

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List of The Colbert Report episodes (2009)

This is a list of episodes for The Colbert Report in 2009.

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List of The Cosby Show episodes

The episodes for the NBC television sitcom The Cosby Show aired from September 20, 1984 to April 30, 1992.

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List of The Magic School Bus episodes

This is a list of episodes of the children's television series The Magic School Bus, which is based on the series of books of the same name written by Joanna Cole.

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List of The Transformers (TV series) characters

This is a list of characters from ''The Transformers'' television series.

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List of theology journals

Theological journals are academic periodical publications in the field of theology.

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List of time periods

The categorization of the past into discrete, quantified named blocks of time is called periodization.

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List of Torchwood items

This is a list of extraterrestrial, supernatural, otherworldly and futuristic items featured in the BBC science-fiction drama Torchwood and its spin-off media.

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List of town walls in England and Wales

This list of town walls in England and Wales describes the fortified walls built and maintained around these towns and cities from the 1st century AD onwards.

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List of treasure hunters

A treasure hunter is a person who, as either a vocation or avocation, searches for sunken, buried, lost, or hidden treasure and other artifacts.

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List of undersea explorers

This is a list of amateur and professional explorers of the oceans, including Archaeologists, Treasure hunters, Biologists, Marine Geologists, Geophysicists, Ocean Engineers, Oceanographers, Submersible Designers, Pilots of Submersibles, Cave Divers, Cavers, and Speleologists, and First Generation Diving Safety Officers.

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List of University of British Columbia people

This is a list of alumni and faculty from the University of British Columbia.

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List of University of California, Berkeley alumni

This page lists notable alumni and students of the University of California, Berkeley.

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List of University of Florida alumni

This list of University of Florida alumni includes current students, former students, and graduates of the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida.

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List of University of Florida faculty and administrators

The List of University of Florida faculty and administrators contains people currently and formerly serving the University of Florida as professors, deans, or in other educational capacities.

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List of University of Michigan alumni

There are more than 500,000 living alumni of the University of Michigan.

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List of University of Oklahoma people

The list of University of Oklahoma people includes notable alumni, faculty, and former students of the University of Oklahoma.

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List of University of Pennsylvania people

This is a partial list of notable faculty, alumni and scholars of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, United States.

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List of University of Peradeniya people

This is a list of notable University of Peradeniya people.

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List of University of Reading alumni

This is a list of University of Reading alumni.

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List of University of Szeged people

The list of University of Szeged people includes notable graduates and nongraduates; professors; and administrators affiliated with the University of Szeged, located in Szeged, Hungary.

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List of University of Utah people

This list of University of Utah people includes notable alumni, non-graduate former students, faculty, staff, and former university presidents.

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List of Uppsala University people

This is a list of notable people affiliated with Uppsala University.

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List of vegetable oils

Vegetable oils are triglycerides extracted from plants.

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List of Walker, Texas Ranger episodes

The following is a list of episodes from the American television series Walker, Texas Ranger.

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List of Waseda University people

This is a list of notable alumni, faculty, and students, from Waseda University.

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List of Wellesley College people

The following is a list of individuals associated with Wellesley College through attending as a student, or serving as a member of the faculty or staff.

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List of Wesleyan University people

This is a partial list of notable people affiliated with Wesleyan University.

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List of words ending in ology

† not study.

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List of words that may be spelled with a ligature

This list of words that may be spelled with a ligature in English encompasses words which have letters that may, in modern usage, either be rendered as two distinct letters or as a single, combined letter.

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List of works based on Arthurian legends

The Matter of Britain stories, focusing on King Arthur, are one of the most popular literary subjects of all time, and have been adapted numerous times in every form of media.

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List of Worthing inhabitants

This is a list of notable inhabitants of the borough of Worthing in West Sussex, England.

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Listoghil

Listoghil is the large central monument in the Carrowmore group of prehistoric tombs in County Sligo in Ireland.

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Lisvane

Lisvane (Llys-faen) is an affluent community in the north of Cardiff, the capital of Wales, located north of the city centre.

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Literae Humaniores

Literae Humaniores is the name given to an undergraduate course focused on Classics (Ancient Rome, Ancient Greece, Latin, ancient Greek and philosophy) at the University of Oxford and some other universities.

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Literature of Birmingham

The literary tradition of Birmingham originally grew out of the culture of religious puritanism that developed in the town in the 16th and 17th centuries.

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Lithic analysis

In archaeology, lithic analysis is the analysis of stone tools and other chipped stone artifacts using basic scientific techniques.

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Lithic core

In archaeology, a lithic core is a distinctive artifact that results from the practice of lithic reduction.

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Lithic flake

In archaeology, a lithic flake is a "portion of rock removed from an objective piece by percussion or pressure,"Andrefsky, W. (2005) Lithics: Macroscopic Approaches to Analysis.

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Lithic reduction

In archaeology, in particular of the Stone Age, lithic reduction is the process of fashioning stones or rocks from their natural state into tools or weapons by removing some parts.

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Lithic Studies Society

The Lithic Studies Society (LSS) was founded in 1979 to advance knowledge of, and education and research in, lithic studies.

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Lithic technology

Lithic technology refers to a broad array of techniques and styles in archaeology, which are used to produce usable tools from various types of stone.

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Lithuanian language

Lithuanian (lietuvių kalba) is a Baltic language spoken in the Baltic region.

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Litløya

Litløya (meaning "Little Island") is a small island in the municipality of Bø in Nordland county, Norway.

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Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument

Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument preserves the site of the June 25 and 26, 1876, Battle of the Little Bighorn, near Crow Agency, Montana, in the United States.

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Little people (mythology)

Little people have been part of the folklore of many cultures in human history, including Ireland, Greece, the Philippines, the Hawaiian Islands, Flores Island, Indonesia, and Native Americans.

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Little Petra

Little Petra (البتراء الصغيرة, al-batrā aṣ-ṣaġïra), also known as Siq al-Barid (سيق البريد, literally "the cold canyon") is an archaeological site located north of Petra and the town of Wadi Musa in the Ma'an Governorate of Jordan.

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Little Rock, Arkansas

Little Rock is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Arkansas.

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Little Salt Spring

Little Salt Spring is an archaeological and paleontological site in North Port, Florida, United States.

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Little Tennessee River

The Little Tennessee River is a tributary of the Tennessee River that flows through the Blue Ridge Mountains of Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee, in the southeastern United States.

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Little Woodbury

Little Woodbury is the name of an important Iron Age archaeological site near the city of Salisbury in the English county of Wiltshire.

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Littlecote House

Littlecote House is a large Elizabethan country house and estate in the civil parishes of Ramsbury and Chilton Foliat in the English county of Wiltshire, near to Hungerford.

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Littlecote Roman Villa

Littlecote Roman Villa is a Roman winged corridor villa and associated religious complex at Littlecote Park in the civil parish of Ramsbury in the English county of Wiltshire.

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Littledean Camp

Littledean was a castle near the village of Lydney in Gloucestershire, England, notable for its unique early Norman design.

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Litzendorf

Litzendorf is a community in the Upper Franconian district of Bamberg.

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Liu Dongsheng

Liu Dongsheng (Chinese: 劉東生, 刘东生; 1917–2008) was a Chinese geologist and archaeologist.

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Liu E

Liu E (also spelled Liu O; 18 October 1857 – 23 August 1909), courtesy name Tieyun, was a Chinese writer, archaeologist and politician of the late Qing Dynasty.

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Liverpool One

Liverpool ONE is a shopping, residential and leisure complex in Liverpool, England.

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Livingstone Museum

The Livingstone Museum, formerly David Livingstone Memorial Museum and Rhodes-Livingstone Museum, is the largest and the oldest museum in Zambia, located in Livingstone near Victoria Falls.

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Lixin Guo

Lixin Guo is a Chinese anthropologist and archaeologist, as well as professor at the Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou.

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Lixus (ancient city)

Lixus is the site of an ancient Roman-Berber-Punic city located in Morocco, just north of the modern seaport of Larache on the bank of the Loukkos River.

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Liza Weil

Liza Rebecca Weil (born June 5, 1977) is an American actress, known for her role as Paris Geller in the WB/CW series Gilmore Girls and its Netflix revival Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life.

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Lizard Mound County Park

Lizard Mound County Park is a county-operated park in Washington County, Wisconsin near the city of West Bend.

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Llangynidr

Llangynidr is a village and an electoral ward in Powys, Wales, about west of Crickhowell and south-east of Brecon.

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Llano, Texas

Llano is a city in Llano County, Texas, in the United States.

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Llanos de Moxos (archaeology)

The Llanos de Moxos (Moxos Plains), also known as the Llanos de Mojos and the Beni Savanna, have extensive remains of pre-Columbian agricultural societies scattered over most of Beni Department, Bolivia.

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Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain

Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain is a village, (in the community of Llansantffraid) and post town in Powys, mid Wales, close to the border with Shropshire in England, about south west of Oswestry and north of Welshpool.

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Lloyds Bank coprolite

The Lloyds Bank coprolite is a large paleofeces, or desiccated human dung specimen, recovered by archaeologists from York Archaeological Trust excavating the Viking settlement of Jórvík (now York) in England.

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Llyn Brenig

Llyn Brenig is a reservoir located in Wales, in the heart of the Denbigh Moors, at a height of 1200 feet, on the border between the counties of Conwy and Denbighshire.

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Llyn Fawr Phase

The Llyn Fawr Phase is the name given by archaeologists to the final metalworking phase of the Bronze Age in Britain, dating to between c. 800 BC and c. 700BC, when the transition to the Iron Age was underway.

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Location hypotheses of Atlantis

Location hypotheses of Atlantis are various proposed real-world settings for the fictional island of Atlantis, described as a lost civilization mentioned in Plato's dialogues Timaeus and Critias, written about 360 B.C. In these dialogues, a character named Critias claims that an island called Atlantis was swallowed by the sea about 9,200 years previously.

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Loch Calder

Loch Calder is a lowland freshwater loch lying approximately south west of Thurso in the Scottish Highlands.

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Loch Shurrery

Loch Shurrery (also known as Loch Shurrey) is a small, shallow, lowland freshwater loch lying approximately south west of Thurso in the Scottish Highlands.

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Lock ring

A lock ring is the name given by archaeologists to a type of jewellery from Bronze Age Europe.

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Locust Grove (Dillwyn, Virginia)

Locust Grove is a historic house located between Dillwyn and Buckingham, Virginia, constructed before 1794.

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Lofotr Viking Museum

The Lofotr Viking Museum (Lofotr Vikingmuseum) is a historical museum based on a reconstruction and archaeological excavation of a Viking chieftain's village on the island of Vestvågøya in the Lofoten archipelago in Nordland county, Norway.

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Logology (science of science)

Logology ("the science of science") is the study of all aspects of science and of its practitioners—aspects philosophical, biological, psychological, societal, historical, political, institutional, financial.

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Lohnweiler

Lohnweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Lohra

Lohra is a community in Marburg-Biedenkopf district in the administrative region of Gießen in Hesse, Germany.

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Loire

The Loire (Léger; Liger) is the longest river in France and the 171st longest in the world.

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Loire Valley (wine)

The Loire Valley wine region includes the French wine regions situated along the Loire River from the Muscadet region near the city of Nantes on the Atlantic coast to the region of Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé just southeast of the city of Orléans in north central France.

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Loisin

Loisin is a commune in the Haute-Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France.

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Loket Castle

Loket Castle (Hrad Loket, Burg Elbogen) is a 12th-century Gothic style castle about from Karlovy Vary on a massive rock in the town of Loket, Karlovarský kraj, Czech Republic.

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Lombardia (wine)

Lombardia (Lombardy) wine is the Italian wine produced in the Lombardy region of north central Italy.

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Londa Schiebinger

Londa Schiebinger (shē/bing/ǝr; born May 13, 1952) is the John L. Hinds Professor of History of Science, Department of History, and by courtesy the d-school, Stanford University.

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London and Middlesex Archaeological Society

The London and Middlesex Archaeological Society (LAMAS) is a society founded in 1855 for the study of the archaeology and local history of the City of London and the historic county of Middlesex.

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Longford, London

Longford is a village in south-east England, immediately north-west of London Heathrow Airport in the London Borough of Hillingdon.

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Longhouses of the indigenous peoples of North America

Longhouses were a style of residential dwelling built by Native American tribes and First Nation band governments in various parts of North America.

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Longshan culture

The Longshan (or Lung-shan) culture, also sometimes referred to as the Black Pottery Culture, was a late Neolithic culture in the middle and lower Yellow River valley areas of northern China from about 3000 to 1900 BC.

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Longueuil

Longueuil is a city in the province of Quebec, Canada.

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Looe Island

Looe Island (Enys Lann-Managh, meaning island of the monk's enclosure), also known as St George's Island, and historically St Michael's Island is a small island a mile from the mainland town of Looe off Cornwall, England.

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Looted art

Looted art has been a consequence of looting during war, natural disaster and riot for centuries.

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Lop Nur

Lop Nur or Lop Nor (from a Mongolian name meaning "Lop Lake") is a former salt lake in China, now largely dried-up, located between the Taklamakan and Kumtag deserts in the southeastern portion of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the People's Republic of China.

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Lord of Sipán

The Lord of Sipán (El Señor de Sipán) is the name given to the first of several Moche mummies found at Huaca Rajada, Sipán, Peru by archaeologist Walter Alva.

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Loren Eiseley

Loren Eiseley (September 3, 1907 – July 9, 1977) was an American anthropologist, educator, philosopher, and natural science writer, who taught and published books from the 1950s through the 1970s.

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Lorenzo Ochoa Salas

Lorenzo Ochoa Salas (died December 7, 2009) was a Mexican archaeologist.

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Lorik Cana

Lorik Agim Cana (born 27 July 1983) is an Albanian former professional footballer.

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Lorraine Copeland

Lorraine Copeland (born Elizabeth Lorraine Adie, 1921, died 27 April 2013) was an archaeologist specialising in the Palaeolithic period of the Near East.

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Los Lunas Decalogue Stone

The Los Lunas Decalogue Stone is a large boulder on the side of Hidden Mountain, near Los Lunas, New Mexico, about south of Albuquerque, that bears a very regular inscription carved into a flat panel.

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Los Millares

Los Millares is a Chalcolithic occupation site 17 km north of Almería, in the municipality of Santa Fe de Mondújar, Andalucía, Spain.

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Los Osos Oaks State Natural Reserve

Los Osos Oaks State Natural Reserve is a California State Park in western San Luis Obispo County, in the Central Coast of California region.

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Los Osos, California

Los Osos is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place located along the Pacific coast of San Luis Obispo County, California.

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Los Restos Indígenas de Pichilemu

Los Restos Indígenas de Pichilemu (The Indigenous Remains of Pichilemu) was a 1908 book published by Chilean historiographer José Toribio Medina.

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Lost Cities and Vanished Civilizations

Lost Cities and Vanished Civilizations is a 1962 book by Robert Silverberg that deals with the then-current archaeology studies of six past civilizations.

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Lost city

A lost city is a settlement that fell into terminal decline and became extensively or completely uninhabited, with the consequence that the site's former significance was no longer known to the wider world.

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Lost City of Z

The Lost City of Z is the name given by Col. Percy Harrison Fawcett, a British surveyor, to an indigenous city that he believed had existed in the jungle of the Mato Grosso state of Brazil.

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Lost history

Many significant locations, cultures/groups, and objects throughout history have been lost, inspiring archaeologists and treasure-hunters around the world to search for them.

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Lost work

A lost work is a document, literary work, or piece of multimedia produced some time in the past of which no surviving copies are known to exist.

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Lotfy El Tanbouli

Lotfy El Tanbouli (born in Alexandria, Egypt 13 February 1919 - died 11 May 1982) was a painter and Egyptologist.

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Lothal

Lothal is one of the southernmost cities of the ancient Indus valley civilization, located in the Bhāl region of the modern state of Gujarāt and first inhabited 3700 BCE.

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Lotterberg

Lotterberg is a (NHN) high hill between the villages of Wolfershausen and Deute in Schwalm-Eder-Kreis, Hesse, Germany.

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Loubat Prize

The Loubat Prize was a pair of prizes awarded by Columbia University every five years between 1898 and 1958 for the best social science works in the English language about North America.

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Lough Gur

Lough Gur (Irish: Loch Gair) is a lake in County Limerick, Ireland between the towns of Herbertstown and Bruff.

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Lough Lene Boat

The Lough Lene Boat, also known as The Monks' Boat, is an underwater archaeological artifact from prehistoric Ireland.

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Loughshinny

Loughshinny is a small village in North County Dublin, Ireland.

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Louis Blondel

Louis Blondel (Geneva 24 November 1885-January 17, 1967) was a Swiss archaeologist, the first director of the cantonal archaeological service in Geneva, as well as one of the founders of Scouting in Switzerland.

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Louis Burkhalter

Louis Burkhalter was a French Archaeologist and former delegate of the Société préhistorique française (French Prehistoric Society).

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Louis Carton

Louis Carton (born June 16, 1861 in Saint Omer, France) was a French physician and archaeologist who was active in Tunisia.

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Louis Demaison

Louis Demaison (5 November 1852 – 5 mai 1937) was a 19th–20th-century French historiographer, archaeologist, and with Henri Jadart, one of the most significant contributors to the nineteenth/twentieth history of the Marne department.

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Louis Duchesne

Louis Marie Olivier Duchesne (13 September 1843 – 21 April 1922) was a French priest, philologist, teacher and a critical historian of Christianity and Roman Catholic liturgy and institutions.

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Louis Dupree (professor)

Professor Louis Dupree (August 23, 1925 – March 21, 1989) was an American archaeologist, anthropologist, and scholar of Afghan culture and history.

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Louis Eugene King

File:Louis king.jpg|Louis Eugene King.

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Louis Félicien de Saulcy

Louis Félicien Joseph Caignart de Saulcy (19 March 1807 – 4 November 1880), better known as simply Félicien or Félix de Saulcy, was a French numismatist, Orientalist, and archaeologist.

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Louis Ferdinand Alfred Maury

Louis Ferdinand Alfred Maury (March 23, 1817 – February 11, 1892), was a French scholar and physician, important because his ideas about the interpretation of dreams and the effect of external stimuli on dreams pre-dated those of Sigmund Freud.

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Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet

Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet (29 August 1821 – 25 September 1898), French archeologist and anthropologist, was born at Meylan, Isère.

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Louis Leakey

Louis Seymour Bazett Leakey (7 August 1903 – 1 October 1972) was a Kenyan paleoanthropologist and archaeologist whose work was important in demonstrating that humans evolved in Africa, particularly through discoveries made at Olduvai Gorge with his wife, fellow paleontologist Mary Leakey.

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Louis Marie Pantaleon Costa

Louie Marie Panteleon Costa, Marquis de Beau-Regard (1806–1864) was a French statesman, archaeologist, historian and ornithologist.

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Louis Massignon

Louis Massignon (25 July 1883 – 31 October 1962) was a Catholic scholar of Islam and a pioneer of Catholic-Muslim mutual understanding.

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Louis Rousselet

Louis-Théophile Marie Rousselet (1845-1929) was a French traveller, writer, photographer and pioneer of the darkroom.

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Louis-Adrien Berbrugger

Louis-Adrien Berbrugger (May 11, 1801July 2, 1869) was a French archeologist and philologist.

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Louis-Hugues Vincent

Louis-Hugues Vincent (31 August 1872 - 30 December 1960) was a French Archeologist, monk of the Dominican Order, who was educated at Jerusalem's École Biblique.

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Louis-Joseph Delaporte

Louis-Joseph Delaporte, often known as Louis Delaporte (22 October 1874 - February 1944) was a French archaeologist and Hittitologist.

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Louisbourg Lighthouse

Louisbourg Lighthouse is an active Canadian lighthouse in Louisbourg, Nova Scotia.

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Louise Murray

Louise Murray, née Welles (2 January 1854 – 22 April 1931), was an American local historian and museum director.

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Low island

A low island is, in geology (and sometimes in archaeology), an island of coral origin.

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Lower Saxony State Museum

The Lower Saxony State Museum (Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum Hannover) is a museum in Hanover, Germany.

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Loyalsock Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania

Loyalsock Township is a township in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Lubbock Lake Landmark

Lubbock Lake Landmark, also known as Lubbock Lake Site, is an important archeological site and natural history preserve in the city of Lubbock, Texas.

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Lublin Museum

Lublin Museum (Muzeum Lubelskie) is one of the oldest and largest museums in the Eastern Poland, located in Lublin.

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Lubor Niederle

Lubor Niederle (September 20, 1865 – June 14, 1944) was a Czech archeologist, anthropologist and ethnographer.

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Luceria

Luceria is an ancient city in the northern Apennines, located in the comune of Canossa in the Province of Reggio Emilia, on the right bank of the river Enza.

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Lucien Golvin

Lucien Golvin, full name Lucien Camille Golvin, was born the 18th of July, 1905 at Villebougis (Yonne) and died the 6th of July, 2002.

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Lucinda Backwell

Lucinda Backwell is an archaeologist and a member of the Academy of Science of South Africa.

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Lucy Goodison

Lucy Goodison is an archeologist and author from Dorset in the United Kingdom.

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Lucy Talcott

Lucy Talcott (April 10, 1899 – April 6, 1970) was an American archaeologist who worked on the excavations at the Ancient Agora of Athens for over twenty years.

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Ludlow Massacre

The Ludlow Massacre was a labor conflict: the Colorado National Guard and Colorado Fuel and Iron Company guards attacked a tent colony of 1,200 striking coal miners and their families at Ludlow, Colorado, on April 20, 1914, with the National Guard using machine guns to fire into the colony.

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Ludwig Bachmann

Ludwig Gottlob Ernst Bachmann (1 January 1792, Leipzig - 15 April 1881) was a German classical philologist.

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Ludwig Curtius

Ludwig Curtius (December 13, 1874 – April 10, 1954) was a German archaeologist born in Augsburg.

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Ludwig Lange (philologist)

Christian Conrad Ludwig Lange (born 4 March 1825 in Hanover; died 18 August 1885 in Leipzig) was a German philologist and archaeologist.

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Ludwig Lindenschmit the Elder

Ludwig Lindenschmit (the Elder) (September 4, 1809 – February 14, 1893) was a German history painter, prehistorian and art instructor who was a native of Mainz.

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Ludwig Schwabe

Ludwig Schwabe (June 24, 1835 – February 20, 1908) was a German classical philologist and professor of classical archaeology born in Giessen.

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Ludwig von Sybel

Ludwig von Sybel (1 July 1846 – 5 April 1929) was a German archaeologist.

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Ludwig von Urlichs

Karl Ludwig von Urlichs (November 9, 1813 – November 3, 1889) was a German philologist and archaeologist born in Osnabrück.

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Ludwigsburg

Ludwigsburg is a city in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, about north of Stuttgart city centre, near the river Neckar.

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Ludwik Krzywicki

Ludwik Krzywicki (21 August 1859 – 10 June 1941) was a Polish anthropologist, economist and sociologist.

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Luigi Canina

Luigi Canina (Casale Monferrato, 1795 – Florence, 1856) was an Italian archaeologist and architect.

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Luigi Lanzi

Luigi Lanzi (14 June 1732 – 30 March 1810) was an Italian art historian and archaeologist.

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Luigi Maria Ugolini

Luigi Maria Ugolini (1895–1936) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Luigi Palma di Cesnola

Luigi Palma di Cesnola (July 29, 1832 – November 20, 1904), an Italian-American soldier, diplomat and amateur archaeologist, was born in Rivarolo Canavese, near Turin.

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Luigi Pigorini

Luigi Pigorini (10 January 1842 – 1 April 1925) was an Italian palaeoethnologist, archaeologist and ethnographer.

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Luis Siret

Luis Siret y Cels (Sint-Niklaas, 26 August 1860 – Herrerías, 7 June 1934) was a Belgian-Spanish archaeologist and illustrator.

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Lullingstone Roman Villa

Lullingstone Roman Villa is a villa built during the Roman occupation of Britain, situated near the village of Eynsford in Kent, south eastern England.

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Lumber River

The Lumber River is a river in south-central North Carolina in the flat Coastal Plain.

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Lumières

The Lumières (literally in English: Enlighteners) was a cultural, philosophical, literary and intellectual movement of the second half of the 18th century, originating in France and spreading throughout Europe.

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Luminescence dating

Luminescence dating refers to a group of methods of determining how long ago mineral grains were last exposed to sunlight or sufficient heating.

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Lund

Lund is a city in the province of Scania, southern Sweden.

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Lupemban culture

The Lupemban is the name given by archaeologists to a central African culture which, though once thought to date between c. 30,000 and 12,000 BC, is now generally recognised to be far older (dates of c. 300,000 have been obtained from Twin Rivers, Zambia and Muguruk, Kenya, respectively).

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Lusitania

Lusitania (Lusitânia; Lusitania) or Hispania Lusitana was an ancient Iberian Roman province located where most of modern Portugal (south of the Douro river) and part of western Spain (the present autonomous community of Extremadura and a part of the province of Salamanca) lie.

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Lutetia

The Gallo-Roman city of Lutetia (also Lutetia Parisiorum in Latin, in French Lutèce) was the predecessor of present-day Paris.

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Luther Cressman

Luther Sheeleigh Cressman (October 24, 1897 – April 4, 1994) was an American field archaeologist, most widely known for his discoveries at Paleo-Indians sites such as Fort Rock Cave and Paisley Caves, sites related to the early settlement of the Americas.

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Lutz Children's Museum

The Lutz Children's Museum is a non-profit children's museum located in Manchester, Connecticut, United States.

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Ly-Cilph

In Peter F. Hamilton's The Night's Dawn Trilogy, the Ly-Cilph are an alien race that evolved on an unnamed moon orbiting a gas giant planet.

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Lyle Campbell

Lyle Richard Campbell (born October 22, 1942) is an American scholar and linguist known for his studies of indigenous American languages, especially those of Central America, and on historical linguistics in general.

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Lyman Lake Rock Art Site

Lyman Lake petroglyphs is a site significant to North American Archaeology.

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Lyn and Exmoor Museum

The Lyn and Exmoor Museum is a small museum in Lynton, Devon, England, housed in the town's oldest surviving domestic dwelling, a Grade II listed, whitewashed, stone cottage.

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Lyn Wadley

Lyn Wadley is an honorary professor of archaeology, and also affiliated jointly with the Archaeology Department and the Institute for Evolution at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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Lynne Goldstein

Lynne Goldstein (born September 18, 1953) is an American archaeologist, known for her work in mortuary analysis, Midwestern archaeology, campus archaeology, repatriation policy, and archaeology and social media.

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Lynne Kelly (science writer)

Lynne Kelly (born 1951) is an Australian writer, researcher and science educator.

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Lynne P. Sullivan

Lynne Sullivan (born December 25, 1952) is an American archaeologist and former Curator of Archaeology for the Frank H. McClung Museum located on the University of Tennessee campus in Knoxville, Tennessee.

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Lyuba Ognenova-Marinova

Lyuba Ognenova-Marinova (Люба Левова Огненова-Маринова 1922–2012) was a pioneering Bulgarian archaeologist.

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Ma Chengyuan

Ma Chengyuan (3 November 1927 – 25 September 2004) was a Chinese archaeologist, epigrapher, and president of the Shanghai Museum.

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Maaseik

Maaseik (Limburgs: Mezeik) is a town and municipality in the Belgian province of Limburg.

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Mabel Grouitch

Mabel Grouitch née Dunlop (August 13, 1872 – August 13, 1956) was an American surgical nurse who worked with the Red Cross during World War I.

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Mabel Lang

Mabel Louise Lang (November 12, 1917 – July 21, 2010) was an American archaeologist and scholar of Classical Greek and Mycenaean culture.

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Macaulay family of Lewis

The Macaulay family of Uig in Lewis, known in Scottish Gaelic as Clann mhic Amhlaigh, were a small family located around Uig on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

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MacGregor plaque

The MacGregor Plaque (or MacGregor Tablet) is the name of an important artefact, which probably derives from the mastaba tomb of the ancient Egyptian king Den (First Dynasty).

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MacGyver

Angus "Mac" MacGyver is a title character and the protagonist in MacGyver.

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MacGyver (1985 TV series, season 2)

The second season of MacGyver, an American television series, began September 22, 1986, and ended on May 4, 1987.

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Machalilla culture

The Machalilla were a prehistoric people in Ecuador, in southern Manabí and the Santa Elena Peninsula.

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Machiste

Machiste is a supporting character in the Warlord a sword and sorcery comic book published by DC Comics.

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Machu Picchu

Machu Picchu (or,, Machu Pikchu) is a 15th-century Inca citadel situated on a mountain ridge above sea level.

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Mackenrodt

Mackenrodt is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Macula (archaeology)

Macula is a term used by archaeologists to describe small two-dimensional features of ancient human origin visible on an aerial photograph, such as points, spots or patches, which may represent features such as burial places, pits, Grubenhäuser (homesteads with sunken floors), constructions based on posthole or features above ground level.

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Madaba

Madaba (مادبا; Biblical Hebrew: Meidvah) is the capital city of Madaba Governorate in central Jordan, with a population of about 60,000.

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Madagascar

Madagascar (Madagasikara), officially the Republic of Madagascar (Repoblikan'i Madagasikara; République de Madagascar), and previously known as the Malagasy Republic, is an island country in the Indian Ocean, off the coast of East Africa.

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Madeleine Colani

Madeleine Colani (August 13, 1866 – June 2, 1943) was a French archaeologist.

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Madeline Kneberg Lewis

Madeline Kneberg Lewis (1903–1996) was an American archaeologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Tennessee.

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Madera Canyon

Madera Canyon (English: "Lumber Gorge") is a canyon in the northwestern face of the Santa Rita Mountains, twenty-five miles southeast of Tucson, Arizona.

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Madira Bickel Mound State Archaeological Site

The Madira Bickel Mound State Archaeological Site is an archaeological site on Terra Ceia Island in northwestern Palmetto, Florida, United States.

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Madison Buffalo Jump State Park

Madison Buffalo Jump State Park is a Montana state park located seven miles south of the Interstate 90 interchange at Logan in Gallatin County, Montana in the United States.

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Madjedbebe

Madjedbebe or Malakunanja II is a rock shelter in Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory of Australia.

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Magan (civilization)

Magan (also Makkan) was an ancient region which was referred to in Sumerian cuneiform texts of around 2300 BC and existed to 550 BC as a source of copper and diorite for Mesopotamia.

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Magdalenenberg

Magdalenenberg is the name of an Iron Age tumulus near the city of Villingen-Schwenningen in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

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Maghnia

Maghnia (formerly Marnia) is a town in Tlemcen Province, northwestern Algeria.

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Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha

is a Japanese anime television series directed by Akiyuki Shinbo, with screenplay written by Masaki Tsuzuki, and produced by Seven Arcs.

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Magnetic survey (archaeology)

Magnetic survey is one of a number of methods used in archaeological geophysics.

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Magnetovision

Magnetovision is the measuring technique enabling the visualization of magnetic field distribution in a given space.

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Magnolia Plantation and Gardens (Charleston, South Carolina)

Magnolia Plantation and Gardens (464 acres, 187.77 hectares) is a historic house with gardens located on the Ashley River at 3550 Ashley River Road west of the Ashley, Charleston County, South Carolina.

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Magnus III of Sweden

Magnus III (Magnus Birgersson/Magnus Ladulås; 1240 – 18 December 1290) was King of Sweden from 1275 until his death in 1290.

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Magnus Magnusson

Magnus Magnusson, KBE (12 October 19297 January 2007) was an Icelandic journalist, translator, writer and television presenter.

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Magosian

The Magosian is the name given by archaeologists to an industry found in southern and eastern Africa.

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Mahdia Museum

The Mahdia Museum is a museum in Tunisia specialising in Tunisian archaeology and heritage.

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Mahmud Ghaznavi Mosque (Odigram)

Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi Mosque (Odigram) is one of the oldest in northern Pakistan, discovered by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Pakistan in 1985.

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Maiden Castle, Cheshire

Maiden Castle is an Iron Age hill fort, one of many fortified hill-top settlements constructed across Britain during the Iron Age, but one of only seven in the county of Cheshire in northern England.

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Maiden Castle, Dorset

Maiden Castle is an Iron Age hill fort south west of Dorchester, in the English county of Dorset.

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Maidstone

Maidstone is a large, historically important town in Kent, England, of which it is the county town.

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Maidstone Museum & Art Gallery

Maidstone Museum & Bentlif Art Gallery a local authority-run museum located in Maidstone, Kent, England, featuring internationally important collections including fine art, natural history, and human history.

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Maiella National Park

The Majella National Park (Parco Nazionale della Majella) is a national park located in the provinces of Chieti, Pescara and L'Aquila, in the region Abruzzo, Italy.

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Mailu Island

Mailu Island is a small, 1.8 km long, island in Central Province, Papua New Guinea.

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Main Square, Kraków

The main square (Rynek Główny) of the Old Town of Kraków, Lesser Poland, is the principal urban space located at the center of the city.

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Mainland, Shetland

The Mainland is the main island of Shetland, Scotland.

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Mainzed

mainzed (acronym for Mainz Centre for Digitality in the Humanities and Cultural Studies) is a joint initiative of six scientific institutions to promote digital methodology in the humanities and cultural sciences in Mainz, Germany.

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Maitum Anthropomorphic Pottery

In 1991, the National Museum archaeological team discovered anthropomorphic secondary burial jars in Ayub Cave, Barangay Pinol, Maitum, Sarangani Province, Mindanao, Philippines.

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Maitum, Sarangani

, officially the, is a settlement_text in the province of,. According to the, it has a population of people.

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Maize

Maize (Zea mays subsp. mays, from maíz after Taíno mahiz), also known as corn, is a cereal grain first domesticated by indigenous peoples in southern Mexico about 10,000 years ago.

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Maja Lidia Kossakowska

Maja Lidia Kossakowska (1972) is a Polish fantasy writer, archeologist and journalist.

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Makah

The Makah (Klallam: màq̓áʔa)Renker, Ann M., and Gunther, Erna (1990).

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Makapansgat

Makapansgat (/mɐkɐˈpɐnsxɐt/) (or Makapan Valley world heritage site) is an archaeological location within the Makapansgat and Zwartkrans Valleys, northeast of Mokopane in Limpopo province, South Africa.

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Makauwahi Cave

The Makauwahi Cave is the largest limestone cave found in Hawaii.

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Makgadikgadi Pan

The Makgadikgadi Pan (Botswana salt flats)(Tswana pronunciation), a salt pan situated in the middle of the dry savanna of north-eastern Botswana, is one of the largest salt flats in the world.

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Making North America (film)

Making North America is a 2015 American documentary film which premiered nationwide on November 4, 2015.

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Mala Compra Plantation Archeological Site

The Mala Compra Plantation Archeological Site is an archaeological site in Palm Coast, Florida, on the east bank of the Matanzas River.

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Malacology

Malacology is the branch of invertebrate zoology that deals with the study of the Mollusca (mollusks or molluscs), the second-largest phylum of animals in terms of described species after the arthropods.

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Malatya Museum

Malatya Museum is a museum in Malatya, Turkey The museum faces Kernek square in Malatya at Although a smaller museum was established in 1971, the present museum building was opened in 1979.

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Malcolm Todd

Malcolm Todd, FSA (27 November 1939 – 6 June 2013) was a British historian and archaeologist with an interest in the interaction between the Roman Empire and Western Europe.

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Malda Museum

Malda Museum is an archaeological museum under the West Bengal Directorate of Archaeology, situated on the Bandh Road of Malda Town.

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Maldon, Essex

Maldon (locally) is a town on the Blackwater estuary in Essex, England.

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Malhar, Chhattisgarh

Malhar is a small town situated in Bilaspur district of Chhattisgarh, India.

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Malia, Crete

Malia or Mallia (Μάλια) is a coastal town and a former municipality in the northeast corner of the Heraklion regional unit in Crete, Greece.

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Malmo Mounds and Village Site

Malmo Mounds and Village Site is a mound group in Aitkin County, Minnesota, located on the northeast shore of Mille Lacs Lake.

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Malta

Malta, officially known as the Republic of Malta (Repubblika ta' Malta), is a Southern European island country consisting of an archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea.

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Malta Story

Malta Story is a 1953 British war film, directed by Brian Desmond Hurst, which is based on the heroic air defence of Malta during the Siege of Malta in the Second World War.

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Maltese dog

The Maltese, Canis familiaris Maelitacus, is a small breed of dog in the Toy Group.

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Maluku Islands

The Maluku Islands or the Moluccas are an archipelago within Banda Sea, Indonesia.

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Mammoth

A mammoth is any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, proboscideans commonly equipped with long, curved tusks and, in northern species, a covering of long hair.

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Mammoth Cave National Park

Mammoth Cave National Park is a U.S. national park in central Kentucky, encompassing portions of Mammoth Cave, the longest cave system known in the world.

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Mamotte Shugogetten

is a manga by Minene Sakurano which was serialized in the monthly magazine Shōnen GanGan from 1997 to 2000.

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Man into Wolf

Man Into Wolf; An Anthropological Interpretation of Sadism, Masochism and Lycanthropy is a book by Robert Eisler, published in 1948.

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Managua

Managua is the capital and largest city of Nicaragua, and the center of eponymous department.

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Manchester Museum

Manchester Museum is a museum displaying works of archaeology, anthropology and natural history and is owned by the University of Manchester, in England.

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Mandara Mountains

The Mandara Mountains are a volcanic range extending about 190 km (about 120 mi) along the northern part of the Cameroon-Nigeria border, from the Benue River in the south to the north-west of Maroua in the north.

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Manfred Bietak

Manfred Bietak (born in Vienna) is an Austrian archaeologist.

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Manfred Korfmann

Manfred Osman Korfmann (April 26, 1942 in Cologne – August 11, 2005, in Ofterdingen, Baden-Württemberg) was a German archaeologist.

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Manhattan Baby

Manhattan Baby is a 1982 Italian horror film directed by Lucio Fulci, starring Christopher Connelly and Carlo De Mejo.

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Manifest (transportation)

A manifest or customs manifest or "cargo document" is a document listing the cargo, passengers, and crew of a ship, aircraft, or vehicle, for the use of customs and other officials.

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Manitoba archaeological regulations

Manitoba archaeology regulations control archaeology-related activities in the province of Manitoba.

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Manitoulin Island

Manitoulin Island is a Canadian lake island in Lake Huron, in the province of Ontario.

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Mankby

Manky was a Medieval village in Finland under the Swedish rule.

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Mankind Quarterly

The Mankind Quarterly is a peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to physical and cultural anthropology, published by the Ulster Institute for Social Research in London.

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Mann Page

Mann Page (1749–1781) was an American lawyer and planter from Spotsylvania County, Virginia.

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Manolis Andronikos

Manolis Andronikos (Μανόλης Ανδρόνικος) (October 23, 1919 – March 30, 1992) was a Greek archaeologist and a professor at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.

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Manor House Museum

Manor House Museum, Ilkley, England, was a local heritage museum, art gallery and education centre, established in 1892 to preserve local archaeological artefacts after the spa town expanded and much Roman material was lost.

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Mansfield Cut Underwater Archeological District

The Mansfield Cut Underwater Archeological District is an area located near the city of Port Mansfield, Texas, United States, in the waters off Kenedy County and Willacy County, Texas.

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Manteño civilization

The Manteño civilization (Spanish: Los Manteños) were the last pre-Columbian civilization in modern-day Ecuador, active from 850 to 1600 CE (1150–400 BP).

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Mantle of the expert

Mantle of the Expert is an education approach that uses imaginary contexts to generate purposeful and engaging activities for learning.

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Manu (Kannada actor)

P.N. Rangan (26 July 1946 - 08 November 2011) known by his pen name and professionally as Manu, was a Kannadiga author and film actor in Kannada film industry.

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Manuel Gamio

Manuel Gamio (1883–1960) was a Mexican anthropologist, archaeologist, sociologist, and a leader of the indigenismo movement.

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Manuel Magri

Fr.

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Manuel Martí

Manuel Martí (1663–1737) was a Spanish archeologist, humanist, writer,and hellenist.

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Manuport

In archaeology and anthropology, a manuport is a natural object which has been moved from its original context by human agency but otherwise remains unmodified.

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Map regression

Map regression is the process of working backwards from later maps to earlier maps of the same area, to determine change or to locate past features.

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Maplewood State Park

Maplewood State Park is a state park of Minnesota, United States, near Pelican Rapids.

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Mapuche

The Mapuche are a group of indigenous inhabitants of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina, including parts of present-day Patagonia.

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Mapuche textiles

One of the best-known arts of the Mapuche is their textiles.

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Marabá, Pará

Marabá is a municipality in the state of Pará, Brazil.

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Marambio Base

Marambio Base (Base Marambio) is a permanent, all year-round Argentine Antarctic base named after Vice-Commodore Gustavo Argentino Marambio, an Antarctic aviation pioneer.

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Marawah Island

Marawah (مروح) is a low-lying island off the coast of Abu Dhabi.

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María Suárez Toro

María Suárez Toro (Puerto Rico, June 5, 1948) is a feminist journalist, an activist in defense of human rights, and an educator.

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Marc Meyer

Marc R. Meyer is an archaeologist and anthropologist who is notable for his excavation of, and research into, the remains of fossil hominids such as Australopithecines and early genus Homo.

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Marc Waelkens

Marc, Knight Waelkens (born 12 April 1948) is a professor emeritus of archaeology at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium.

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Marcel-Auguste Dieulafoy

Marcel-Auguste Dieulafoy (August 3, 1844 - February 25, 1920) was a French archaeologist, noted for his excavations at Susa (modern-day Shush, Iran) in 1885 and for his work, L'Art antique de la Perse.

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Marcelino Sanz de Sautuola

Don Marcelino Sanz de Sautuola or Marcelino de Sautuola was a Spanish jurist and amateur archaeologist who owned the land where the Altamira cave was found.

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March 23

No description.

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March or Die (film)

March or Die is a 1977 British war drama film directed by Dick Richards and starring Gene Hackman, Terence Hill, Catherine Deneuve, Max von Sydow and Ian Holm.

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Marcia Euphemia

Marcia Euphemia (also known as Aelia Marcia Euphemia) was the wife of Anthemius, Western Roman Emperor.

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Marcus Kretzer

Marcus Kretzer (born May 9, 1965 in Hilden, Germany) is a German pianist and music teacher.

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Mardin Museum

Mardin Museum is a museum in Mardin, Turkey.

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Marek Kohn

Marek Kohn is a British science writer on evolution, biology and society.

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Marek Zvelebil

Marek Zvelebil, FSA (1952–2011) was a Czech-Dutch archaeologist and prehistorian, considered amongst "the most important and influential archaeological thinkers of his generation".

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Margaret Barber

Margaret Fairless Barber (7 May 1869 – 24 August 1901), pseudonym Michael Fairless, was an English Christian writer whose book of meditations, The Roadmender (1902) became a popular classic.

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Margaret Brent

Margaret Brent (c. 1601 – c. 1671), an English immigrant to the Colony of Maryland, settling in its new capitol, St. Mary's City, Maryland, she was the first woman in the English North American colonies to appear before a court of the common law.

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Margaret Conkey

Margaret W. Conkey (born 1943) is an American archaeologist and academic,Haviland, William; Walrath, Dana & Prins, Harald (2007) Evolution and Prehistory: The Human Challenge, Wadsworth,, p. 210 who specializes in the Magdalenian period of the Upper Paleolithic in the French Pyrénées.

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Margaret Elizabeth Ashley-Towle

Margaret Elizabeth Ashley-Towle (January 12, 1902 – November 2, 1985) was an American archaeologist.

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Margaret Guido

Cecily Margaret Guido (née Preston; 5 August 1912 – 8 September 1994), known as Peggy Piggott during her first marriage, was an English archaeologist, prehistorian, and finds specialist.

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Margaret Hasluck

Margaret Masson Hardie Hasluck M.B.E. (1944) (18 June 1885 – 18 October 1948) was a Scottish geographer, linguist, epigrapher, archaeologist and scholar.

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Margaret Jope

Margaret Jope (1913–2004) was a Scottish biochemist, born as Henrietta Margaret Halliday in Peterhead, Scotland.

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Margaret Munn-Rankin

Joan Margaret Munn-Rankin (29 July 1913 – 28 July 1981), known as Margaret Munn-Rankin and published as J. M. Munn-Rankin, was a British archaeologist, historian, and academic, who specialised in the ancient Near East.

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Margaret Murray

Margaret Alice Murray (13 July 1863 – 13 November 1963) was an Anglo-Indian Egyptologist, archaeologist, anthropologist, historian, and folklorist.

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Margaret Roxan

Margaret Roxan (1924–2003) was a British archaeologist and expert on Roman military diplomas.

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Margaret Ursula Jones

Margaret Ursula Jones (16 May 1916 – 23 March 2001) was a British archaeologist, best known for directing major excavations at Mucking, Essex.

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Margaret Wheat

Margaret Marean Wheat (September 9, 1908 — August 28, 1988) was an American anthropologist, archeologist and paleontologist who worked and made significant contributions in the Great Basin, in North America.

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Margareta Biörnstad

Margareta Biörnstad (born 23May 1928), is a Swedish archaeologist.

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Margareta Steinby

Eva Margareta Steinby FSA (born 21 November 1938) is a Finnish classical archaeologist.

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Margrét Hermanns Auðardóttir

Margrét Hermanns Auðardóttir PhD, is an Icelandic archaeologist best known for her PhD thesis presenting the provocative theory that Iceland may have been settled by Scandinavians (probably Christian refugees from pagan Norway) long before the official date of 874.

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Margret Nissen

Margret Nissen (born Margarete Speer; 19 June 1938) is a German photographer.

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Margrethe II of Denmark

Margrethe II (Margrethe 2.,; Margreta 2.; Margrethe II; full name: Margrethe Alexandrine Þórhildur Ingrid; born 16 April 1940) is the Queen of Denmark; as well as the supreme authority of the Church of Denmark and Commander-in-Chief of the Danish Defence.

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Maria Reiche

Maria Reiche (15 May 1903 – 8 June 1998) was a German-born Peruvian mathematician, archaeologist, and technical translator.

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Mariana Castillo Deball

Mariana Castillo Deball (born 1975 in Mexico City) is an artist who studied in the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City and the Jan Van Eyck Academie in Maastricht.

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Marianne Cardale de Schrimpff

Professor Marianne Vere Cardale de Schrimpff is a Colombian anthropologist, archaeologist, academic and writer.

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Marib Dam

The Marib Dam (سـدّ مَـأرِب, or) is a dam blocking the Wadi Adhanah (also Dhana or Adhana), in the valley of Dhana in the Balaq Hills, Yemen.

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Marie Hackin

Marie Parmentier, married name Marie Hackin, (1905-1941) was an archaeologist and Resistance member who worked with her husband Joseph Hackin.

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Marie Luise Kaschnitz

Marie Luise Kaschnitz (born Marie Luise von Holzing-Berslett; 31 January 1901 – 10 October 1974) was a German short story writer, novelist, essayist and poet.

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Marija Gimbutas

Marija Gimbutas (Marija Gimbutienė; January 23, 1921 – February 2, 1994) was a Lithuanian-American archaeologist and anthropologist known for her research into the Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures of "Old Europe" and for her Kurgan hypothesis, which located the Proto-Indo-European homeland in the Pontic Steppe.

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Marilyn Masson

Marilyn Masson (born 1958) is a Maya archaeologist whose research has focused on social transformation and political economy of ancient Mesoamerican cultures in Mexico and Belize.

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Marine isotope stage

Marine isotope stages (MIS), marine oxygen-isotope stages, or oxygen isotope stages (OIS), are alternating warm and cool periods in the Earth's paleoclimate, deduced from oxygen isotope data reflecting changes in temperature derived from data from deep sea core samples.

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Mario

() is a fictional character in the ''Mario'' video game franchise, owned by Nintendo and created by Japanese video game designer Shigeru Miyamoto.

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Mario (franchise)

The franchise is a video game franchise published and produced by Nintendo starring the fictional Italian-American character Mario.

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Marion Dowd

Marion Dowd is an archaeologist.

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Marion Ravenwood

Marion Ravenwood is a fictional character who first appeared in the 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark.

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Marion Rawson

Marion Rawson (August 17, 1899 – October 29, 1980) was an American archaeologist.

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Marion True

Marion True (born November 5, 1948) was the former curator of antiquities for the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, California.

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Maritime history of Florida

The maritime history of Florida describes significant past events relating to the U.S. state of Florida in areas concerning shipping, shipwrecks, and military installations and lighthouses constructed to protect or aid navigation and development of the Florida peninsula.

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Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art

The Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art (MSM; formerly known as the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Natural History) is a museum located on the main campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV), established in 1967.

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Marjorie F. Lambert

Marjorie Ferguson Lambert (1908-2006) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist, who primarily studied Native American and Hispanic cultures in the American Southwest.

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Mark 1

Mark 1 is the first chapter of the Gospel of Mark in the New Testament of the Christian Bible.

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Mark G. Thomas

Mark G. Thomas (born 5 June 1964 on Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, England) is a human evolutionary geneticist, Professor of Evolutionary Genetics at the Research Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment at University College London.

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Mark Horton (archaeologist)

Mark Chatwin Horton, FSA (born 15 February 1956) is a British maritime and historical archaeologist, television presenter and writer.

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Mark Lehner

Mark Lehner is an American archaeologist with more than 30 years of experience excavating in Egypt.

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Mark P. Leone

Mark Paul Leone (born 1940) is an American archaeologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Maryland, College Park.

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Mark Pardo Shellworks Site

The Mark Pardo Shellworks Site is an archaeological site west of Bokeelia, Florida.

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Mark Patton (archaeologist)

Mark Patton (born 7 January 1965 in Jersey) is a British archaeologist and novelist known for his work on the prehistory of the Channel Islands and North-Western France, particularly the archaeology of megaliths, as well as the prehistory of the Mediterranean islands, the theory of island biogeography and the history of European archaeology.

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Mark Raymond Harrington

Mark Raymond Harrington (July 6, 1882 – June 30, 1971) was curator of archaeology at the Southwest Museum 1928-1964 and discoverer of ancient Pueblo structures near Overton, Nevada and Little Lake, California.

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Mark Roberts (archaeologist)

Mark Brian Roberts (born 20 May 1961) is an English archaeologist specialising in the study of the Palaeolithic.

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Mark S. Inch

Mark Sherwin Inch is a retired United States Army Major General who served as the 9th Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons of the United States.

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Mark Wallace (journalist)

Mark Edwin Wallace (born 20 August 1984) is a British journalist, newspaper columnist and political activist.

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Marker horizon

Marker horizons or chronohorizons or marker beds are stratigraphic units of the same age and of such distinctive composition and appearance, that, despite their presence in separate geographic locations, there is no doubt about their being of equivalent age (isochronous) and of common origin.

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Marko Vego

Marko Vego (January 8, 1907 – February 26, 1985) was a Bosnian and Herzegovinian archaeologist, epigrapher and historian.

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Markus Casey

Markus Casey, Irish Archaeologist, 1957-2008.

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Marlborough Royal Free Grammar School

Marlborough Royal Free Grammar School, previously known as Marlborough Grammar School and King Edward's School, Marlborough, was a grammar school in the town of Marlborough, in Wiltshire, England, founded in 1550.

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Maro Douka

Maro Douka (Μάρω Δούκα; born 1947) is a Greek novelist.

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Maronite Chronicles

The Maronite Chronicles is a fragmentary document in Syriac language, written by Syrian Christian Maronites in the middle of the 7th century.

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Maronite mummies

The Maronite mummies are eight well preserved natural mummies of Maronite villagers dating back to around 1283 AD.

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Marquard Gude

Marquard Gude (Gudius) (1 February 1635 – 26 November 1689) was a German archaeologist and classical scholar, most famous for his collection of Greek and Latin inscriptions.

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Marquesas Islands

The Marquesas Islands (Îles Marquises or Archipel des Marquises or Marquises; Marquesan: Te Henua (K)enana (North Marquesan) and Te FenuaEnata (South Marquesan), both meaning "the land of men") are a group of volcanic islands in French Polynesia, an overseas collectivity of France in the southern Pacific Ocean.

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Marsala Ship

The Marsala Ship is the earliest warship known from archeological evidence.

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Marshall Howard Saville

Marshall Howard Saville (1867–1935) was an American archaeologist, born in Rockport, Massachusetts.

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Marshalltown trowel

The Marshalltown trowel is a tool used by archaeologists in the United States of America and elsewhere.

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Martha Hopkins Struever

Martha Hopkins Struever (1931–2017) was an American Indian art dealer, author, and leading scholar on historic and contemporary Pueblo Indian pottery and Pueblo and Navajo Indian jewelry.

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Martha Rhoads Bell

Martha Hope Rhoads Bell (April 27, 1941 – November 12, 1991) was an American archaeologist.

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Martha Sharp Joukowsky

Martha Sharp Joukowsky (born 2 September 1936) is a Near Eastern archaeologist and a retired member of the faculty of Brown University known for her fieldwork at the ancient site of Petra in Jordan.

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Martin Bommas

Martin Bommas (born 1967) is a German Egyptologist, archaeologist, and philologist.

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Martin Carver

Martin Oswald Hugh Carver, FSA, Hon FSA Scot (born 8 July 1941) is Emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the University of York, England, director of the Sutton Hoo Research Project and a leading exponent of new methods in excavation and survey.

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Martin Classical Lectures

The Martin Classical Lectures is a function of the Charles Beebe Martin Foundation established at Oberlin College in Ohio.

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Martin Gusinde Anthropological Museum

The Martin Gusinde Anthropological Museum is an anthropology museum in Puerto Williams, Isla Navarino, in southernmost Chile.

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Martin Hall (academic)

Martin Hall (born in Guildford, England) is a British-South African academic and educationalist who has written extensively on South African history, culture and higher education policy.

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Martin Heinrich Gustav Schwantes

Martin Heinrich Gustav Schwantes (18 September 1881 near Hanover – 1960 in Hamburg) was a German archaeologist and botanist specialist of Aizoaceae (Mesembryanthemaceae).

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Martin Millett

Martin John Millett, (born 30 September 1955) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Martin Mystère

Martin Mystère is both the name and protagonist of an Italian comic book.

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Martina Pippal

Martina Pippal (born 1957) is an Austrian art historian and a painter and sculptor.

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Martyn Jope

Edward Martyn Jope (28 December 1915 – 14 November 1996) was an English archaeologist and chemist.

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Mary Beaudry

Mary Carolyn Beaudry is an American archaeologist, educator and author whose research focuses on historical archaeology, material culture and the anthropology of food.

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Mary Brodrick

Dr.

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Mary Cecil, 2nd Baroness Amherst of Hackney

Mary Rothes Margaret Cecil, 2nd Baroness Amherst of Hackney, (née Mary Rothes Margaret Tyssen-Amherst; 25 April 1857 – 21 December 1919) was a British hereditary peer, charity worker, amateur archaeologist and ornithologist.

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Mary Chubb

Mary Chubb (22 March 1903 – 22 January 2003) was a British author and archaeologist.

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Mary Hamilton Swindler

Mary Hamilton Swindler (January 2, 1884 – January 16, 1967) was an American archaeologist, classical art scholar, author, and professor of classical archaeology, most notably at Bryn Mawr College, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Michigan.

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Mary Harlow

Mary Harlow, (born 20 October 1956) is an English archaeologist and classical scholar.

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Mary King's Close

Mary King's Close is a historic close located under buildings on the Royal Mile, in the historic Old Town area of Edinburgh, Scotland.

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Mary Kitson Clark

Anna Mary Hawthorn Kitson Clark, (14 May 1905 – 1 February 2005), married name Mary Chitty, was a British archaeologist, curator, and independent scholar.

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Mary Leakey

Mary Douglas Leakey, FBA (née Nicol, 6 February 1913 – 9 December 1996) was a British paleoanthropologist who discovered the first fossilised Proconsul skull, an extinct ape which is now believed to be ancestral to humans.

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Mary Lou Ridinger

Mary Lou Ridinger was born in Ft. Worth TX in 1945.

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Mary Miller (actress)

Mary Elizabeth Miller (born 27 December 1933) is an English television and stage actress, who was a founding member of the National Theatre Company in 1963.

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Mary Ross Ellingson

Mary Ross Ellingson (1906–1993) was a 20th-century classical archaeologist who worked on the excavations at Olynthus in Greece and whose research on the use of terracotta figurines in ancient Greece was published without proper credit by her mentor, David Moore Robinson.

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Mary Sibbet Copley

Mary Sibbet Copley (June 19, 1843 – June 9, 1929) was an American philanthropist and charity worker.

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Mary's Well

Mary’s Well (عين العذراء, ʿAin il- ʿadhrāʾ or "The spring of the Virgin Mary") is reputed to be located at the site where, according to the Catholic tradition, Angel Gabriel appeared to Mary, mother of Jesus and announced that she would bear the Son of God – an event known as the Annunciation.

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Mary-Ann Ochota

Mary-Ann Ochota (O-hot-ah; born 8 May 1981) is a British broadcaster and anthropologist specialising in anthropology, archaeology, social history and adventure factual television.

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Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton

Mary-Russell Ferrell Colton (March 25, 1889 – July 26, 1971) was an American artist, author, educator, ethnographer, and curator.

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Masaryk University

Masaryk University (Masarykova univerzita; Universitas Masarykiana Brunensis) is the second largest university in the Czech Republic, a member of the Compostela Group and the Utrecht Network.

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Masei

Masei, Mas'ei, or Masse (— Hebrew for "journeys," the second word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 43rd weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the 10th and last in the Book of Numbers.

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Maspero television building

Maspero (ماسبيرو) is the name of the huge building on the bank of the Nile river in Cairo, Egypt.

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Mass grave

A mass grave is a grave containing multiple human corpses, which may or may not be identified prior to burial.

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Massacre of Glencoe

The Massacre of Glencoe (Gaelic: Mort Ghlinne Comhann) took place in Glen Coe in the Highlands of Scotland on 13 February 1692, following the Jacobite uprising of 1689-92.

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Massimo Pallottino

Massimo Pallottino (9 November 1909 in Rome – 7 February 1995 in Rome) was an Italian archaeologist specializing in Etruscan civilization and art.

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Massoud Azarnoush

Massoud Azarnoush (25 March 1945 – 27 November 2008) was an Iranian archaeologist.

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Mast Forest Late Archaic Period

This period in North American archaeology is also referred to as the Piedmont period.

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Mastodon State Historic Site

Mastodon State Historic Site is a publicly owned, archaeological and paleontological site with recreational features in Imperial, Missouri, maintained by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, preserving the Kimmswick Bone Bed.

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Material culture

Material culture is the physical aspect of culture in the objects and architecture that surround people.

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Matheronodon

Matheronodon (meaning "Matheron tooth") is a genus of ornithopod dinosaur in the clade Rhabdodontidae.

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Mathieu Auguste Geffroy

Mathieu Auguste Geffroy (21 April 1820 – 16 August 1895) was a French historian born in Paris.

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Matt Magee

Matt Magee is an American contemporary artist who is best known for his minimal abstract geometric paintings, sculptures, prints, assemblages, murals and photographs.

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Mattaponi

The Mattaponi tribe is one of only two Virginia Indian tribes in the Commonwealth of Virginia that owns reservation land, which it has held since the colonial era.

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Matthew Bloxam

Matthew Holbeche Bloxam (12 May 1805 – 24 April 1888), a native of Rugby, Warwickshire, England, was a Warwickshire antiquary and amateur archeologist, author of a popular guide to Gothic architecture.

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Matthew Flinders

Captain Matthew Flinders (16 March 1774 – 19 July 1814) was an English navigator and cartographer, who was the leader of the first circumnavigation of Australia and identified it as a continent.

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Matthew J. Adams

Matthew J. Adams is an archeologist who specializes in the Near East.

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Matthew Spriggs

Matthew Spriggs is a Professor of Archaeology at the School of Archaeology and Anthropology of the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra.

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Matthew Stirling

Matthew Williams Stirling (August 28, 1896 – January 23, 1975) was an American ethnologist, archaeologist and later an administrator at several scientific institutions in the field.

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Matzenbach

Matzenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Maud Cunnington

Maud Edith Cunnington (née Pegge; 24 September 1869 – 28 February 1951) was a Welsh-born archaeologist, most famous for her pioneering work on the prehistoric sites of Salisbury Plain.

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Mauna Kea Ice Age Reserve

The Mauna Kea Ice Age Natural Area Reserve is a Hawaii state natural reserve that includes the Mauna Kea Adz Quarry, on the southern slope of Mauna Kea on the island of the Hawaiokinai.

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Maunder Minimum

The Maunder Minimum, also known as the "prolonged sunspot minimum", is the name used for the period around 1645 to 1715 during which sunspots became exceedingly rare, as was then noted by solar observers.

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Maurice Besnier

Maurice Besnier (29 September 1873, Paris – 4 March 1933, Caen) was a French historian, who specialised in ancient geography and topography.

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Maurice Tallon

Reverend Father Maurice Edouard Tallon (22 October 1906 – 21 July 1982) was a French Jesuit archaeologist notable for his work on prehistory in Lebanon.

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Mavis (DC Comics)

Mavis is the name of two fictional characters who first appeared in the DC Comics' universe.

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Mawsley

Mawsley is a newly built village and civil parish in the Kettering borough of Northamptonshire, England.

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Max Kunze

Max Kunze (born 26 October 1944 in Schotten) is a German classical archaeologist.

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Max Mallowan

Sir Max Edgar Lucien Mallowan, CBE (6 May 1904 – 19 August 1978) was a prominent British archaeologist, specialising in ancient Middle Eastern history.

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Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History

The Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (German: Max-Planck-Institut für Menschheitsgeschichte) performs basic research into archaeogenetics and linguistic cultural evolution.

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Max Taitz

Max Taitz (1904-1980) — scientist, engineer, one of the founders of the Gromov Flight Research Institute (1941), doctor of technical science, professor, recipient of the Stalin Prize (1949 and 1953), Honoured Scientist of the RSFSR (1961).

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Max Uhle

Friedrich Max Uhle (25 March 1856 – 11 May 1944) was a German archaeologist, whose work in Peru, Chile, Ecuador and Bolivia at the turn of the Twentieth Century had a significant impact on the practice of archaeology of South America.

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Max van Berchem

Max van Berchem (16 March 1863, Geneva – 7 March 1921, Vaumarcus) was a Swiss epigraphist and historian.

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Max von Oppenheim

Max (Freiherr) von Oppenheim (15 July 1860 in Cologne – 17 November 1946 in Landshut) was a German lawyer, diplomat, ancient historian, and archaeologist.

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Maxime Collignon

Léon-Maxime Collignon (8 November 1849 in Verdun – 15 October 1917 in Paris) was a French archaeologist who specialized in ancient Greek art and architecture.

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Maxime Siroux

Maxime Siroux (1907–1975) was a French architect and archaeologist.

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May 1913

The following events occurred in May 1913.

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Maya (treasurer)

Maya was an important figure during the reign of Pharaohs Tutankhamun, Ay and Horemheb of the eighteenth dynasty of Ancient Egypt.

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Maya architecture

A unique and intricate style, the tradition of Maya architecture spans several thousands of years.

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Maya codices

Maya codices (singular codex) are folding books written by the pre-Columbian Maya civilization in Maya hieroglyphic script on Mesoamerican bark cloth.

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Maya cuisine

Ancient Maya cuisine was varied and extensive.

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Maya dance

In pre-Columbian Maya civilization, ceremonial dance had great importance.

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Maya Haïdar Boustani

Maya Abdallah Haïdar Boustani is a Lebanese archaeologist and curator of the Museum of Lebanese Prehistory at Saint Joseph University, Beirut.

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Maya script

Maya script, also known as Maya glyphs, was the writing system of the Maya civilization of Mesoamerica and is the only Mesoamerican writing system that has been substantially deciphered.

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Mayanism

Mayanism is a non-codified eclectic collection of New Age beliefs, influenced in part by Pre-Columbian Maya mythology and some folk beliefs of the modern Maya peoples.

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Mayanist

A Mayanist (Spanish: "mayista") is a scholar specialising in research and study of the Mesoamerican pre-Columbian Maya civilization.

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Mayborn Museum Complex

The Mayborn Museum Complex is a facility that opened in May 2004 at Baylor University in Waco, Texas.

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Mayroubian

The Mayroubian (from the type site Mayrouba) is a culture of the Lebanese Stone Age.

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Mário de Andrade

Mário Raul de Morais Andrade (October 9, 1893 – February 25, 1945) was a Brazilian poet, novelist, musicologist, art historian and critic, and photographer.

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Mâliâraq Vebæk

Mâliâraq Vebæk (20 April 1917 – 25 February 2012) was a Greenlandic teacher and writer.

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Märta Strömberg

Märta Strömberg (1921 – 2012) was a Swedish archaeologist.

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Móra Ferenc Múzeum

The Móra Ferenc Museum (6720 Szeged, Roosevelt tér 1-3.) is a museum in Szeged, Hungary, at the intersection of the bank of the river Tisza and the Downtown Bridge.

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Mörschbach

Mörschbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Müden (Mosel)

Müden an der Mosel is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – and a tourism resort in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Müllenbach, Cochem-Zell

Müllenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Mürlenbach

Mürlenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Mbala, Zambia

Mbala is Zambia’s most northerly large town and seat of Mbala District, occupying a strategic location close to the border with Tanzania and controlling the southern approaches to Lake Tanganyika, 40 km by road to the north-west, where the port of Mpulungu is located.

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McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture

The McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture is a general museum located on the campus of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

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McClure Arctic Expedition

The McClure Arctic Expedition of 1850, among numerous British search efforts to determine the fate of the Franklin's lost expedition, is distinguished as the voyage during which Robert McClure became the first person to confirm and transit the Northwest Passage by a combination of sea travel and sledging.

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McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research is a research institute of the University of Cambridge in England.

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McGregor Museum

The McGregor Museum in Kimberley, South Africa, originally known as the Alexander McGregor Memorial Museum, is a multidisciplinary museum which serves Kimberley and the Northern Cape, established in 1907.

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McIntosh County, Oklahoma

McIntosh County is a county located in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.

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McKinney Falls State Park

McKinney Falls State Park is a state park in Austin, Texas, United States at the confluence of Onion Creek and Williamson Creek.

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McLean House (Appomattox, Virginia)

The McLean House in Appomattox, Virginia is within the Appomattox Court House National Historical Park.

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McLean Museum

The McLean Museum and Art Gallery is a museum and art gallery situated in Greenock, Inverclyde, Scotland.

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McMicken College of Arts and Sciences

The McMicken College of Arts and Sciences is a liberal arts college of the University of Cincinnati.

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McWhinney point

McWhinney or McWhinney Heavy Stemmed is a term for a shape of point in prehistoric lithic weapons and tools found primarily in the midwestern United States, dating from the Late Archaic period in the Americas.

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Meadows Center for Water and the Environment

The Meadows Center for Water and the Environment, formerly the Aquarena Center, is an educational center in San Marcos, Texas, dedicated to the preservation of the unique archeological and biological resources of Spring Lake.

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Međimurje County

Međimurje County (Međimurska županija) is a triangle-shaped county in the northernmost part of Croatia, roughly corresponding to the historical and geographical region of Međimurje.

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Međimurje County Museum

The Međimurje County Museum in Čakovec, the seat of Međimurje County, Croatia, is located in the Zrinski Castle inner palace, the biggest medieval fortification in the county, close to the centre of the town and its main square.

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Mebyon Kernow

Mebyon Kernow – The Party for Cornwall (MK; Cornish for Sons of Cornwall) is a Cornish nationalist, centre-left political party in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Mecklenburg

Mecklenburg (locally, Low German: Mękel(n)borg) is a historical region in northern Germany comprising the western and larger part of the federal-state Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

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Medang Kingdom

The Medang Empire or Mataram Kingdom was a Javanese Hindu–Buddhist kingdom that flourished between the 8th and 11th centuries.

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Medard

Medard is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Meddersheim

Meddersheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Medeli

Medeli also known as Henchir-Mencoub is a location and archaeology site in Tunisia, North Africa.

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Medieval archaeology

Medieval archaeology is the study of humankind through its material culture, specialising in the period of the European Middle Ages.

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Medieval Archaeology (journal)

Medieval Archaeology is an annual peer-reviewed academic journal covering the archaeology of the medieval period, especially in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

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Medieval football

"Medieval football" is a modern term used for a wide variety of localised football games which were invented and played in Europe during the Middle Ages.

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Medieval History Magazine

Medieval History Magazine was a magazine dedicated to the medieval era, with a readership encompassing historians, re-enactors and other individuals interested in the history of the Middle Ages.

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Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria

Mediterranea University of Reggio Calabria (Università degli Studi Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria), also referred to as Mediterranea University or University of Reggio Calabria, or simply UNIRC, is an Italian public research university, located in Reggio Calabria, Italy.

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Medway Megaliths

The Medway Megaliths, sometimes termed the Kentish Megaliths, are a group of Early Neolithic chambered long barrows and other megalithic monuments located in the lower valley of the River Medway in Kent, South-East England.

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Medzhybizh

Medzhybizh, previously known as Mezhybozhe, population 1731, (Census 2001) (Меджибіж, Меджибож, Translit: Medzhibozh, Międzybóż, Medschybisch, מעזשביזש, translit. Mezhbizh) is a town in the Khmelnytskyi Oblast (province) of western Ukraine.

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Mega Disasters

Mega Disasters is an American documentary television series that originally aired from May 23, 2006 to July 2008 on The History Channel.

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Mega Man Legends

Mega Man Legends, known as in Japan, is a series in the ''Mega Man'' franchise.

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Mega Man X (video game)

Mega Man X, known in Japan as Rockman X, is an action-platform video game developed and published by Capcom for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES).

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Megalithic architectural elements

This article describes several characteristic architectural elements typical of European megalithic (Stone Age) structures.

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Megiddo, Israel

Megiddo (מְגִדּוֹ، المجیدو) is a kibbutz in northern Israel.

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Mehren, Vulkaneifel

Mehren is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Mel Fisher's Treasure Museum

Mel Fisher's Treasure Museum is located at 1322 U.S. Highway 1, Sebastian, Florida.

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Melanesia

Melanesia is a subregion of Oceania extending from New Guinea island in the southwestern Pacific Ocean to the Arafura Sea, and eastward to Fiji.

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Melbourne Bone Bed

Melbourne Bone Bed is a paleontological site located at Crane Creek in Melbourne, in the U.S. state of Florida.

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Melbourne Castle

Melbourne Castle was a medieval castle in Melbourne, Derbyshire.

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Meldon Bridge Period

The Meldon Bridge Period is the name given by archaeologists to the earliest period of metalworking and the first period of the late Neolithic in Britain.

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Melinda A. Zeder

Melinda A. Zeder is an American archaeologist and Curator Emeritus in the Department of Anthropology of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution.

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Melrose Plantation

Melrose Plantation, also known as Yucca Plantation, is a National Historic Landmark in Natchitoches Parish in north central Louisiana.

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Memorial Park Site

The Memorial Park Site (designated 36CN164) is an archaeological site located near the confluence of Bald Eagle Creek and the West Branch Susquehanna River in Lock Haven in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Memory of a Broken Dimension

Memory of a Broken Dimension is an upcoming video game in development by XRA.

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Meninx (town)

Meninx is a Tunisian archaeological site located on the south-east coast of the island of Djerba, near the present city of Henchir El Kantara.

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Menkaure

Menkaure (also Menkaura, Egyptian transliteration mn-k3w-Rˁ), was an ancient Egyptian king (pharaoh) of the 4th dynasty during the Old Kingdom, who is well known under his Hellenized names Mykerinos (Μυκερίνος) (by Herodotus) and Menkheres (by Manetho).

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Meonstoke

Meonstoke is a village in Hampshire, England.

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Meråker

Meråker is a municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway.

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Mercè Canela

Mercè Canela (Sant Guim de Freixenet, la Segarra, 1956) is a Catalan writer and translator.

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Mercedes Richards

Mercedes Tharam Richards (Kingston, 14 May 1955 – Hershey, 3 February 2016), née Davis, was a Jamaican astronomy and astrophysics professor.

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Mercer Museum

The Mercer Museum is a museum located in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Merchant

A merchant is a person who trades in commodities produced by other people.

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Mercy Bay

Mercy Bay is a Canadian Arctic waterway in the Northwest Territories.

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Mercy Seiradaki

Note: In the Greek language Seiradaki is the customary last name for a woman married to someone called Seiradakis.

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Mercyhurst University

Mercyhurst University, formerly Mercyhurst College, is a Catholic liberal arts college in Erie, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Merit badge (Boy Scouts of America)

Merit badges are awards earned by youth members of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA), based on activities within the area of study by completing a list of periodically updated requirements.

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Merlin Stone

Merlin Stone (born Marilyn Jacobson, September 27, 1931 – February 23, 2011) was an American author, sculptor, and professor of art and art history.

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Mermuth

Mermuth is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Meroë Head

The Meroë Head, or Head of Augustus from Meroë is a larger-than-life-size bronze head that was found in the ancient Nubian site of Meroë in Sudan.

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Merowe Dam

The Merowe Dam, also known as Merowe High Dam, Merowe Multi-Purpose Hydro Project or Hamdab Dam, is a large dam near Merowe Town in northern Sudan, about north of the capital Khartoum.

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Merritt Ruhlen

Merritt Ruhlen (born 1944) is an American linguist who has worked on the classification of languages and what this reveals about the origin and evolution of modern humans.

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Merry Andrew (film)

Merry Andrew is a 1958 American musical film directed and choreographed by Michael Kidd and starring Danny Kaye.

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Mersin Museum

Mersin Museum is the main museum of Mersin, Turkey.

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Merton (parish)

Merton is an ancient parish which was first in Surrey but since 1965 (as Merton Priory) has been in London, bounded by Wimbledon to the north, Mitcham to the east, Morden, Cheam and Cuddington (Worcester Park and rest of Motspur Park) to the south and (New) Malden to the west.

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Mesoamerican Archaic period

The Archaic period, also known as the preceramic period,Kennett 2012, p. 1.

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Mesoamerican cosmovision

The pre-Columbian societies of Mesoamerica shared a world view or "cosmovision".

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Mesoamerican languages

Mesoamerican languages are the languages indigenous to the Mesoamerican cultural area, which covers southern Mexico, all of Guatemala and Belize and parts of Honduras and El Salvador and Nicaragua.

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Mesoamerican pyramids

Mesoamerican pyramids or pyramid-shaped structures form a prominent part of ancient Mesoamerican architecture.

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Mesopotamia

Mesopotamia is a historical region in West Asia situated within the Tigris–Euphrates river system, in modern days roughly corresponding to most of Iraq, Kuwait, parts of Northern Saudi Arabia, the eastern parts of Syria, Southeastern Turkey, and regions along the Turkish–Syrian and Iran–Iraq borders.

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Metal detector

A metal detector is an electronic instrument which detects the presence of metal nearby.

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Metropolis (Anatolia)

The classical city of Metropolis is situated in western Turkey near Yeniköy village in Torbali municipality - approximately 40 km SE of Izmir.

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Michael A. Hoffman

Michael Allen Hoffman (October 14, 1944– April 23, 1990) was an American archaeologist, Egyptologist, and author.

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Michael Arbuthnot

Michael Alexander Arbuthnot (born 8 June 1974) is an archaeologist, instructor and archaeological film-maker.

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Michael Avi-Yonah

Dr.

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Michael Ben-Ari

Michael Ben-Ari (מיכאל בן ארי, born 12 October 1963) is an Israeli politician, and former member of the Knesset.

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Michael Brian Schiffer

Michael Brian Schiffer (born October 4, 1947) is an American archaeologist and one of the founders and pre-eminent exponents of behavioral archaeology.

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Michael Byrnes (writer)

Michael J. Byrnes is an American author of archeological thrillers.

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Michael C. Barnette

Michael C. Barnette is an accomplished diver, author, photographer and founder of the Association of Underwater Explorers.

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Michael Cosmopoulos

Michael Basil Cosmopoulos (Μιχαήλ Βασιλείου Κοσμόπουλος; born 1963).

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Michael Crichton

John Michael Crichton (October 23, 1942 – November 4, 2008) was an American author, screenwriter, film director and producer best known for his work in the science fiction, thriller, and medical fiction genres.

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Michael D. Coe

Michael D. Coe (born 1929) is an American archaeologist, anthropologist, epigrapher and author.

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Michael Deffner

Joseph Michael Deffner (Μιχαήλ Δέφνερ * 18 September 1848 in Donauwörth; † 15 October 1934 in Athens) was a German classical philologist and linguist, known for his studies exploring the Tsakonian language.

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Michael E. Smith

Michael Ernest Smith (born 1953) is an American archaeologist working primarily with Aztec and general Mesoamerican archaeology.

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Michael Fulford

Michael Gordon Fulford, CBE, FBA, (born 1948 Hampshire) is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Reading, He studied Archaeology and Latin at Southampton University, where he was also awarded a doctorate.

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Michael Hudson (economist)

Michael Hudson, born March 14, 1939, is an American economist, professor of economics at the University of Missouri in Kansas City and a researcher at the Levy Economics Institute at Bard College, former Wall Street analyst, political consultant, commentator and journalist.

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Michael J. O'Kelly

Professor Michael J. O'Kelly (1915 – October 1982) was an Irish archaeologist who excavated and restored Newgrange, a Late Stone Age passage tomb in the Boyne Valley, County Meath, Ireland, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

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Michael J. Snarskis

Michael Jay Snarskis (April 12, 1945 – January 24, 2011) was an archeologist from the United States who founded the scientific study of archaeology in Costa Rica.

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Michael Meinecke

Michael Meinecke (6 November 1941 – 10 January 1995) was a German art historian, archaeologist and Islamic studies scholar who was director of the Museum of Islamic Art in Berlin from 1988 to 1995.

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Michael Mortimer Wheeler

Michael Mortimer Wheeler (8 January 1915 – 7 August 1992) was a British lawyer.

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Michael Ridley

Michael Ridley is an English author, archaeologist and orientalist.

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Michael Roaf

Michael Roaf is a British archaeologist specialising in ancient Iranian studies and Assyriology.

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Michael Rostovtzeff

Mikhail Ivanovich Rostovtzeff, or Rostovtsev (Михаи́л Ива́нович Росто́вцев) (Zhitomir, Russian Empire – October 20, 1952, New Haven, USA) was an ancient historian whose career straddled the 19th and 20th centuries and who produced important works on ancient Roman and Greek history.

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Michael Shanks

Michael Garrett Shanks (born December 15, 1970) is a Canadian actor, writer and director.

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Michael Shanks (archaeologist)

Michael Shanks (born 1959, Newcastle upon Tyne) is a British archaeologist specializes in classical archaeology and archaeological theory.

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Michael Sinclair Sanders

Michael Sinclair Sanders (born 1939) is a British amateur archaeologist.

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Michael Swanton

Michael James Swanton is a British polymath: historian and archaeologist, translator and literary critic specialising in Old English literature and the Anglo-Saxon period.

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Michael Tellinger

Michael Tellinger is a South African author, scientist, explorer and founder of the Ubuntu Party which supports the supply of resources free of charge across society.

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Michael Tweedie

Michael Wilmer Forbes Tweedie (2 September 1907 – 1993) was a naturalist and archaeologist working in South East Asia, who was Director of the Raffles Museum in Singapore.

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Michael Ventris

Michael George Francis Ventris, OBE (12 July 1922 – 6 September 1956) was an English architect, classicist and philologist who deciphered Linear B, the ancient Mycenaean Greek script.

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Michael W. Meister

Michael W. Meister is an art historian, archaeologist and architectural historian at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Michele Arditi

The marquess Michele Arditi (Presicce, 13 September 1746 – Naples, 23 April 1838) was an Italian lawyer, antiquarian and archaeologist, uncle of the historian Giacomo Arditi.

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Michele Mercati

Michele Mercati (8 April 1541 – 25 June 1593) was a physician who was superintendent of the Vatican Botanical Garden under Popes Pius V, Gregory XIII, Sixtus V, and Clement VIII.

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Michele Stefano de Rossi

Michele Stefano de Rossi (30 October 1834, Rome – 23 October 1898, Rocca di Papa) was an Italian seismologist.

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Michelle Rocca

Michelle Rocca (born 1961, Dublin) is an Irish former model, television presenter, and beauty queen who, in 1980, won the Miss Ireland title.

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Michelsberg culture

The Michelsberg culture (Michelsberger Kultur (MK)) is an important Neolithic culture in Central Europe.

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Mick Aston

Professor Michael Antony Aston, FSA (1 July 1946 – 24 June 2013) was an English archaeologist who specialised in Early Medieval landscape archaeology.

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Mickey Mouse universe

The Mickey Mouse universe is a fictional shared universe which is the setting for stories involving Disney cartoon characters Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Pluto, Goofy, Donald Duck and many other characters.

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Micropaleontology

Micropaleontology (also sometimes spelled as micropalaeontology) is the branch of palaeontology that studies microfossils, or fossils that require the use of a microscope to see the organism, its morphology and its characteristic details.

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Midden

A midden (also kitchen midden or shell heap) is an old dump for domestic waste which may consist of animal bone, human excrement, botanical material, mollusc shells, sherds, lithics (especially debitage), and other artifacts and ecofacts associated with past human occupation.

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Middle Ages

In the history of Europe, the Middle Ages (or Medieval Period) lasted from the 5th to the 15th century.

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Middle Ages in film

Medieval films imagine and portray the Middle Ages through the visual, audio and thematic forms of cinema.

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Middle American Research Institute

The Middle American Research Institute was established at Tulane University in 1924.

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Middle chronology

The middle chronology is one chronology of the Near Eastern Bronze and Early Iron Age, which fixes the reign of Hammurabi to 1792–1750 BCE and the sack of Babylon to 1595 BCE.

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Middle East

The Middle Easttranslit-std; translit; Orta Şərq; Central Kurdish: ڕۆژھەڵاتی ناوین, Rojhelatî Nawîn; Moyen-Orient; translit; translit; translit; Rojhilata Navîn; translit; Bariga Dhexe; Orta Doğu; translit is a transcontinental region centered on Western Asia, Turkey (both Asian and European), and Egypt (which is mostly in North Africa).

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Middle range theory (sociology)

Middle-range theory, developed by Robert K. Merton, is an approach to sociological theorizing aimed at integrating theory and empirical research.

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Middle-range theory (archaeology)

In archaeology, middle range theory refers to theories linking human behavior and natural processes to physical remains in the archaeological record.

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Middlebrook, Greater Manchester

Middlebrook is a locality that spans the boundaries of Horwich and Lostock in the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton, Greater Manchester, England.

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Middlesex County, Virginia

Middlesex County is a county located on the Middle Peninsula in the U.S. state of Virginia.

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Middleton-by-Youlgreave

Middleton, often known as Middleton-by-Youlgreave or Middleton-by-Youlgrave to distinguish it from nearby Middleton-by-Wirksworth, is a village in the Peak District, Derbyshire, England.

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Midea (Argolid)

Midea (Μιδέα) is the name given to a Bronze Age citadel standing above the village of the same name in the Argolid in Greece.

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Midea, Greece

Midea (Μιδέα) is a village and a former municipality in Argolis, Peloponnese, Greece.

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Midgarth

Midgarth, also known as the Holm of Midgarth and Linga Holm is an uninhabited Scottish island extending to approximately situated west of Stronsay island in the Orkney archipelago.

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Midnight at the Well of Souls

Midnight at the Well of Souls is the first book in the Well of Souls series by American author Jack L. Chalker, first published as a paperback in 1977.

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Midtbyen, Trondheim

Midtbyen is a borough of the city of Trondheim in Trøndelag county, Norway.

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Mieczysław Domaradzki

Mieczysław Marian Domaradzki (Мечислав Домарадски, Mechislav Domaradski); born October 2, 1949 in Brzeg, Poland – June 26, 1998 in Septemvri, Bulgaria) was a Polish archaeologist and thracologist. Professor Mieczyslaw Domaradzki has devoted his career to Thracian archaeology in Bulgaria. He was the founder of the project "An archaeological map of Bulgaria" and also the discoverer of the emporium Pistiros, an important site founded in the fifth century B.C. in the upper Maritsa (ancient Hebrus) valley, remarkable for its inland location. The archaeological material found in Pistiros is preserved in the Archaeological Museum “Prof. Mieczysław Domaradzki” – in the town of Septemvri. Domaradzki graduated in archaeology from the Jagiellonian University in Kraków. He defended a master's degree thesis on the Celtic shield in Europe under Kazimierz Godłowski in 1972. In 1973, Domaradzki was awarded a doctorate grant by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and arrived in Bulgaria to study ancient Thrace of the 1st millennium BC. He spent the 22 years from 1976, when he took his doctor's degree (his dissertation was about the Celtic invasions in Thrace) under professor Ivan Venedikov, to his death in 1998, based in that country. Domaradzki was a regular reader at Veliko Tarnovo University and held a master's course on Celtic art at New Bulgarian University, besides giving lectures at various Central European universities, most notably the Jagiellonian University, the University of Warsaw and the Charles University in Prague. In late 1997, he was appointed head of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Opole.

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Mighty Max (TV series)

Mighty Max is an American animated action/sci-fi television series that aired from 12 September 1993 to 2 December 1994 to promote the British Mighty Max toys, an outgrowth of the Polly Pocket line, created by Bluebird Toys in 1992.

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Migration Period

The Migration Period was a period during the decline of the Roman Empire around the 4th to 6th centuries AD in which there were widespread migrations of peoples within or into Europe, mostly into Roman territory, notably the Germanic tribes and the Huns.

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Miguel Chevalier

Miguel Chevalier (born 1959) is a French digital artist known internationally as one of the pioneers of digital and virtual art.

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Mihalovec

Mihalovec (MichalovetzLeksikon občin kraljestev in dežel zastopanih v državnem zboru, vol. 4: Štajersko. 1904. Vienna: C. Kr. Dvorna in Državna Tiskarna, p. 8.) is a settlement on the left bank of the Sava River, south of Dobova in the Municipality of Brežice in eastern Slovenia.

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Mikałaj Ułaščyk

Mikałaj Ułaščyk (Mikalai Ulashchyk, Belarusian language: Мікалай Улашчык, Russian: Николай Николаевич Улащик; February 14, 1906 - November 22, 1986) was a Belarusian academic historian and archaeologist known for significant contributions to the research in the medieval history of Belarus.

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Mike (novel)

Mike is a novel by P. G. Wodehouse, first published on 15 September 1909McIlvaine, E., Sherby, L.S. and Heineman, J.H. (1990) P.G. Wodehouse: A comprehensive bibliography and checklist.

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Mike Davis (boat builder)

Mike Davis (December 6, 1939 – November 3, 2008) was a boat builder who was a hands-on advocate for making recreational boat usage available on the Hudson River from New York City and New Jersey.

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Mike DiMeo

Mike DiMeo (born November 29, 1968 in New York City) is a hard rock/heavy metal vocalist, best known for his work in the band Riot, which he left in late 2006.

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Mike Parker Pearson

Michael 'Mike' Parker Pearson, FSA, FSA Scot, FBA (born 26 June 1957) is an English archaeologist specialising in the study of the Neolithic British Isles, Madagascar and the archaeology of death and burial, and is known for his catchphrase "The Dead Don't Bury Themselves".

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Mike Pitts (archaeologist)

Mike Pitts, is an English freelance journalist and archaeologist who specialises in the study of British prehistory.

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Mike Rowe

Michael Gregory Rowe (born March 18, 1962) is an American actor primarily known as a television host and narrator.

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Mike Taylor (guitarist)

Mike Taylor (July 21, 1948 – September 5, 2010) was an American guitarist, songwriter, and arranger.

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Mikhail Illarionovich Artamonov

Mikhail Illarionovich Artamonov (Михаил Илларионович Артамонов; in the village of Vygolovo, Tver Governorate, now Molokovsky District, Tver Oblast - July 31, 1972 in Leningrad) was a Soviet historian and archaeologist, who came to be recognized as the founding father of modern Khazar studies.

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Mikhail Masson

Mikhail Evgenievich Masson (5 December 1897 – 1986) was an important Soviet archaeologist from Samarkand.

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Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov

Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov (Михаи́л Миха́йлович Гера́симов) (2 September 1907 – 21 July 1970) was a renowned Soviet archaeologist and anthropologist who discovered the Mal'ta–Buret' culture and developed the first technique of forensic sculpture based on findings of anthropology, archaeology, paleontology, and forensic science.

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Mikhail Znamensky

Mikhail Stepanovich Znamensky (Михаи́л Степа́нович Зна́менский, 26 May 1833, Kurgan, Imperial Russia—15 March 1892, Tobolsk, Imperial Russia) was a Russian writer, memoirist, painter, caricaturist, archeologist and ethnographer.

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Milas

Milas (ancient Greek Mylasa Μύλασα) is an ancient city and the seat of the district of the same name in Muğla Province in southwestern Turkey.

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Milas Museum

Milas Museum (Milas Müzesi) is a museum of archaeology and ethnography in Muğla Province of Turkey.

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Mildenhall, Suffolk

Mildenhall is a small market town and civil parish in Suffolk, England.

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Mileiha

Mleiha is a village and a municipality in the Emirate of Sharjah of the United Arab Emirates with a population of 4,768 (2015), located some 20 km south of the inland Sharjah town of Dhaid.

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Miles Russell

Miles Russell, (born 8 April 1967) is a British archaeologist best known for his work and publications on the prehistoric and Roman periods and for his appearances in television programmes such as Time Team and Harry Hill's TV Burp.

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Milford H. Wolpoff

Milford Howell Wolpoff is a paleoanthropologist working as a professor of anthropology and adjunct associate research scientist, Museum of Anthropology, at the University of Michigan.

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Military history of Birmingham

The city of Birmingham, in England, has a long military history and has been for several centuries a major manufacturer of weapons.

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Military history of Iraq

The military history of Iraq, due to a rich archaeological record, is one of the longest in written human history.

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Military of Mycenaean Greece

The military nature of Mycenaean Greece (c. 1600–1100 BC) in the Late Bronze Age is evident by the numerous weapons unearthed, warrior and combat representations in contemporary art, as well as by the preserved Greek Linear B records.

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Military technology

Military technology is the application of technology for use in warfare.

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Mill of Ayreland

The Mill of Ayreland is an historic watermill driven by water force of the Burn of Ayreland, a northwesterly flowing coastal stream within Mainland Orkney, Scotland, that empties into the Clestrain Sound approximately five kilometres southerly of Stenness.

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Millau

Millau (Milhau) is a commune in the Aveyron department in the French Occitanie region in southern France.

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Mille Lacs Lake

Mille Lacs Lake (also called Lake Mille Lacs or Mille Lacs) is a large but shallow lake in the U.S. state of Minnesota.

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Miloje Vasić

Miloje Vasić (Милоје Васић; 16 September 1869 – 4 November 1956) was a Serbian archaeologist, regarded as one of the most distinguished representatives of the humanistic studies in Serbia.

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Milton Keynes Hoard

The Milton Keynes Hoard is a hoard of Bronze Age gold found in September 2000 in a field near Monkston in Milton Keynes, England.

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Milwaukee Public Museum

The Milwaukee Public Museum (MPM) is a natural and human history museum located in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

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Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University

Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University (Mimar Sinan Güzel Sanatlar Üniversitesi; abbreviated MSGSÜ) is a Turkish state university dedicated to the higher education of fine arts.

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Minas Gerais

Minas Gerais is a state in the north of Southeastern Brazil.

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Minatogawa Man

The Minatogawa people are a prehistoric people of Okinawa, Japan, represented by four skeletons, two male and two female, and some isolated bones dated between 16,000 and 14,000 years BCE.

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Mineral and Lapidary Museum

The Mineral and Lapidary Museum of Henderson County is a non-profit, volunteer-run museum in Hendersonville, North Carolina founded in 1997 at 400 North Main Street in the middle of the city's Historic District.

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Mineral County, West Virginia

Mineral County is a county in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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Minerva (archaeology magazine)

Minerva, The International Review of Ancient Art and Archaeology, is a bi-monthly magazine publishing features on exhibitions, excavations, and museums, interviews, travelogues, auction reports, news items, and book reviews.

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Minet ed Dhalia point

A Minet ed Dhalia point or stylet is an archaeological term for an elongated, isosceles triangle made with pressure flaking on both faces of a piece of flint.

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Mining in the Upper Harz

Mining in the Upper Harz region of central Germany was a major industry for several centuries, especially for the production of silver, lead, copper, and, latterly, zinc as well.

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Mining Museum Příbram

Mining Museum Příbram (Hornické muzeum Příbram) is a large open-air museum of mining with historical buildings and expositions of mining history and mineralogy.

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Ministry of Culture (Lebanon)

The Ministry of Culture (Ministère de la Culture, وزارة الثقافة) is a government ministry of Lebanon.

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Minmontu

Minmontu (mn.w-mnṯ.w) was a High Priest of Amun from the time of Ahmose I (18th Dynasty).

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Minnesota Woman

Minnesota Woman, also known as Pelican Rapids-Minnesota Woman, is the name given to the skeletal remains of a woman thought to be 8,000 years old.

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Minoan civilization

The Minoan civilization was an Aegean Bronze Age civilization on the island of Crete and other Aegean Islands which flourished from about 2600 to 1600 BC, before a late period of decline, finally ending around 1100.

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Minoan frescoes from Tell el-Daba

The Minoan wall paintings at Tell El-Dab'a are of particular interest to Egyptologists and archaeologists.

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Minoan pottery

Minoan pottery has been used as a tool for dating the mute Minoan civilization.

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Minsi Trails Council

Minsi Trails Council is a council of the Boy Scouts of America that serves Scouts of eastern Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley and Pocono regions as well as parts of western New Jersey.

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Minster-in-Thanet

Minster, also known as Minster-in-Thanet, is a village and civil parish in the Thanet District of Kent, England.

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Minyan ware

Minyan ware is a broad archaeological term describing varieties of a particular style of Aegean burnished pottery associated with the Middle Helladic period (c. 2000/1900–1550 BC).

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Miodrag Grbić

Miodrag Grbić, (25 December 1901 – 30 June 1969 in Belgrade) was a Serbian archeologist and custos.

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Mirador Basin

The Mirador Basin is a hypothesized geological depression found in the remote rainforest of the northern department of Petén, Guatemala.

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Miraflores District, Lima

Miraflores is a district of the Lima Province in Peru.

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Miran fort

Miran fort is a ruined defensive structure in Miran, Xinjiang, China.

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Miranda Aldhouse-Green

Miranda Jane Aldhouse-Green, (née Aldhouse; born 24 July 1947) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Miranda Krestovnikoff

Miranda Krestovnikoff (born 29 January 1973)Who's Who is a British radio and television presenter specialising in natural history and archaeological programmes.

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Mircea Nedelciu

Mircea Nedelciu (November 12, 1950 – July 12, 1999) was a Romanian short-story writer, novelist, essayist and literary critic, one of the leading exponents of the Optzecişti generation in Romanian letters.

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Miriam Stark

Miriam T. Stark (born September 14, 1962) is an American archaeologist whose field experience and emphasis of studies have included locations in North America, the Near East and Southeast Asia.

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Mirror, Mirror (TV series)

Mirror, Mirror is a television programme co-produced by Australia and New Zealand.

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Misraħ Għar il-Kbir

Misrah Ghar il-Kbir (informally known as Clapham Junction) is a prehistoric site in Siġġiewi, Malta, near the Dingli Cliffs.

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Mission San Juan Capistrano

Mission San Juan Capistrano was a Spanish mission in colonial Las Californias.

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Mississippi River

The Mississippi River is the chief river of the second-largest drainage system on the North American continent, second only to the Hudson Bay drainage system.

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Mississippian culture pottery

Mississippian culture pottery is the ceramic tradition of the Mississippian culture (800 to 1600 CE) found as artifacts in archaeological sites in the American Midwest and Southeast.

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Missouri

Missouri is a state in the Midwestern United States.

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Mister T (TV series)

Mister T is an animated series that aired on NBC on Saturday morning from 1983 to 1986.

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Mitja Brodar

Mitja Brodar (1921 – 16 February 2012) was a Slovenian archaeologist.

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Mitrovica, Kosovo

Mitrovica (Mitrovicë) or Kosovska Mitrovica (Serbian Cyrillic: Косовска Митровица) is a city and municipality located in the Mitrovica District of Kosovo.

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Mitsuo Kagawa

was a Japanese archaeologist and a professor at Beppu University in Ōita Prefecture, Japan.

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Mixco Viejo

Mixco Viejo ("Old Mixco"), occasionally spelt Mixcu Viejo, is an archaeological site in the north east of the Chimaltenango department of Guatemala, some to the north of Guatemala City and from the junction of the rivers Pixcaya and Motagua.

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Mladeč caves

The Mladeč caves (Mladečské jeskyně) are a cave complex in the Czech Republic situated to the west of the village of Mladeč in the Litovelské Pomoraví Protected Landscape Area.

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Moa

The moa were nine species (in six genera) of flightless birds endemic to New Zealand.

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Moche culture

The Moche civilization (alternatively, the Mochica culture or the Early, Pre- or Proto-Chimú) flourished in northern Peru with its capital near present-day Moche, Trujillo, Peru from about 100 to 700 AD during the Regional Development Epoch.

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Moche portrait vessel

Moche portrait vessels are ceramic vessels featuring highly individualized and naturalistic representations of human faces that are unique to the Moche culture of Peru.

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Modern ruins

Modern ruins is a neologism referring to ruins of architecture constructed in the recent past, generally in the most recent century, or since the 19th century.

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Moesgaard Museum

Moesgaard Museum (MOMU) is a Danish regional museum dedicated to archaeology and ethnography.

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Moesgård

Moesgård is a former manor house and a listed building in Aarhus Municipality.

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Mohammed al Janahi

Mohammed al Janahi (محمد الجناحي; died June 20, 2008) was a noted Emirati film and stage actor.

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Mohammed Rafique Mughal

Muhammad Rafiq Mugal is a Pakistani archaeologist, engaged in investigating of ethnoarchaeological research in Chitral, northern Pakistan.

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Mohawk people

The Mohawk people (who identify as Kanien'kehá:ka) are the most easterly tribe of the Haudenosaunee, or Iroquois Confederacy.

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Mojokerto child

The Mojokerto child, also known as Mojokerto 1 and Perning 1, is the fossilized skullcap of a juvenile early human.

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Mollie's Nipple

Mollie's Nipple or Molly's Nipple is the name given to as many as seven peaks, at least one butte, at least one well, and some other geological features in Utah.

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Mona Rudao

Mona Rudao, or Mouna Rudao (1880–1930) was the son of a chief of the Seediq tribe of Taiwanese aborigines.

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Monasterace Archeological Museum

The Museo Archeologico di Monasterace (Monasterace Archeological Museum) is a museum in Monasterace, southern Italy.

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Monastery of Saint Moses the Abyssinian

Mar Musa or Deir Mar Musa al-Habashi (ܕܝܪܐ ܪܡܪܝ ܡܘܫܐ ܟܘܫܝܐ deiro d-mor mūše kūšoyo; دير مار موسى الحبشي / ALA-LC: dayr mār Mūsá al-Ḥabashī, literally "the monastery of saint Moses the Abyssinian") is a monastic community of the Syriac Catholic Church located near the town of Nabk, approximately north of Damascus, on the eastern slopes of the Anti-Lebanon.

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Monastic garden

A monastic garden was used by many and for multiple purposes.

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Monastiraki, Crete

Monastiraki is the archaeological site of an ancient Minoan town on the island of Crete.

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Mong, Punjab

Mong or Mung (مونگ) is a town and Union Council of Mandi Bahauddin District in the Punjab province of Pakistan.

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Mongoloid

Mongoloid is a grouping of all or some peoples indigenous to East Asia, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, North Asia, South Asia, the Arctic, the Americas and the Pacific Islands.

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Monivea Castle

Monivea Castle is a former O'Kelly tower house, located near Monivea in County Galway, Ireland.

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Monmouth Museum

The Monmouth Museum, alternatively known as The Nelson Museum and Local History Centre, is a museum in Monmouth, Monmouthshire, south east Wales.

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Mono County, California

Mono County (MOH-noh) is a county located in the east central portion of the U.S. state of California.

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Monongahela culture

The Monongahela culture were a Native American cultural manifestation of Late Woodland peoples from AD 1050 to 1635 in present-day western Pennsylvania, western Maryland, eastern Ohio, and West Virginia.

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Monrepos (archaeology)

Monrepos is an archaeological research centre and a museum for the human behavioural evolution located at Schloss Monrepos in Neuwied.

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Monsheim

Monsheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Monster Force

Monster Force is a 13-episode animated television series created in 1994 by Universal Cartoon Studios and Canadian studio Lacewood Productions.

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Montée du Gourguillon

The Montée du Gourguillon is a very old street of the hill of Fourvière in the 5th arrondissement of Lyon, between the Saint-Jean and Saint-Just quarters.

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Monte Alto culture

Monte Alto is an archaeological site on the Pacific Coast in what is now Guatemala.

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Monte Cristi Pipe Wreck

Monte Cristi Pipe Wreck is a submerged archaeological site located off the north coast of Hispaniola in the Dominican Republic near the border of Haiti, part of the Greater Antilles in the Caribbean.

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Monte Grossu

Monte Grossu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Monte Lazzu

Monte Lazzu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Monte Melkonian

Monte Melkonian (classical Մոնթէ Մելքոնեան; reformed: Մոնթե Մելքոնյան; November 25, 1957 – June 12, 1993) was an Armenian revolutionary, left-wing nationalist militant and commander.

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Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education

Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM) (in Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education), also known as Tecnológico de Monterrey or simply as Tec, is a private, nonsectarian and coeducational multi-campus university based in Monterrey, Mexico.

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Montgomery County, Tennessee

Montgomery County is a county located in the U.S. state of Tennessee.

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Montgomeryshire Collections

Montgomeryshire Collections is the annual journal of the Powysland Club, containing scholarly articles on archaeological and historical topics relating to Powys, book reviews, and society notes.

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Monticello

Monticello was the primary plantation of Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States, who began designing and building Monticello at age 26 after inheriting land from his father.

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Montpelier (Orange, Virginia)

James Madison's Montpelier, located in Orange County, Virginia, was the plantation house of the Madison family, including fourth President of the United States, James Madison, and his wife Dolley.

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Montreal

Montreal (officially Montréal) is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada.

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Monument

A monument is a type of—usually three-dimensional—structure that was explicitly created to commemorate a person or event, or which has become relevant to a social group as a part of their remembrance of historic times or cultural heritage, due to its artistic, historical, political, technical or architectural importance.

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Monument Class Description

A Monument Class Description provides a synthesis and summary of the archaeological evidence for a particular type of British ancient monument.

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Monument Hill and Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites

Monument Hill and Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites is a historic state park located at 29.888° -96.876°, just off U.S. Route 77, south of La Grange, Texas.

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Monument to Stepan Razin

Monument to Stepan Razin (Памятник Степану Разину) is one of the monuments in the city of Rostov-on-Don, Rostov Oblast, Russia.

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Monumental Cemetery of Bonaria

The Monumental Cemetery of Bonaria is located in Cagliari, Sardinia.

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Monumental sculpture

The term monumental sculpture is often used in art history and criticism, but not always consistently.

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Monuments of Athens

Monuments of Athens (Greek: Μνημεία Αθηνών) is a book first published in 1924 by the Greek archaeologist Alexander Philadelpheus.

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Monzingen

Monzingen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Moon Knight

Moon Knight (Marc Spector) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

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Mooney Site

The Mooney site is located on the Red River Levee in Norman County, Minnesota.

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Mopan River

The Mopan River is a river in Central America spanning the Petén Department of Guatemala and the Cayo District of Belize.

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Moqui Cave

Moqui Cave is a sandstone erosion cave in southern Utah, United States.

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Moravian Historical Society

The Moravian Historical Society in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, was founded in 1857.

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Morden Park

Morden Park is an area within the district of Morden in the London Borough of Merton, and includes the Park itself, an area of green space in an otherwise dense cluster of 1930s suburban housing.

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Morera Thatte

Morera Thatte is an archaeological site consisting of a number of stone structures on Chikkabenkal hill near Gangavathi in Koppal district, India, dating back to the Stone Age.

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Morganton, North Carolina

Morganton is a city in Burke County, North Carolina, United States.

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Morgraig Castle

Morgraig Castle (Castell Morgraig) is a ruined castle, which lies close to the southern borders of the county borough of Caerphilly, overlooking Cardiff in Wales.

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Mormon studies

Mormon studies is the interdisciplinary academic study of the beliefs, practices, history and culture of those known by the term Mormon and denominations belonging to the Latter Day Saint movement whose members do not generally go by the term "Mormon".

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Morphology (archaeology)

Morphology in archaeology, the study of shapes and forms, and their grouping into period styles remains a crucial tool, despite modern techniques like radiocarbon dating, in the identification and dating not only of works of art but all classes of archaeological artefact, including purely functional ones (ignoring the question of whether purely functional artefacts exist).

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Morris K. Jessup

Morris Ketchum Jessup (March 2, 1900 – April 20, 1959), had a Master of Science Degree in astronomy and, though employed for most of his life as an automobile-parts salesman and a photographer, is probably best remembered for his writings on UFOs.

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Morrison's Haven

Morrison's Haven (or Morison's Haven) is a harbour at Prestongrange, East Lothian, Scotland, UK, on the B1348, close to Levenhall Links, Prestongrange Industrial Heritage Museum, Prestonpans, and Prestongrange House.

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Morro Bay State Park

Morro Bay State Park is a state park on the Morro Bay lagoon, in western San Luis Obispo County, central California.

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Mortimer Wheeler

Sir Robert Eric Mortimer Wheeler (10 September 1890 – 22 July 1976) was a British archaeologist and officer in the British Army.

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Mortuary enclosure

A mortuary enclosure is a term given in archaeology and anthropology to an area, surrounded by a wood, stone or earthwork barrier, in which dead bodies are placed for excarnation and to await secondary and/or collective burial.

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Mortuary house

In archaeology and anthropology a mortuary house is any purpose-built structure, often resembling a normal dwelling in many ways, in which a dead body is buried.

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Moshe Dayan

Moshe Dayan (משה דיין; 20 May 1915 – 16 October 1981) was an Israeli military leader and politician.

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Moshe Prausnitz

Moshe (Max) W. Prausnitz (Hebrew: משה פראוסניץ; December 22, 1922 – July 1, 1998) was an Israeli archaeologist who specialized in the prehistory field.

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Moshe Stekelis

Moshe Stekelis (1898 – 14 March 1967) was a Russian born archaeologist who excavated the Neolithic Yarmukian culture at Sha'ar HaGolan.

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Mossy Liquor

Mossy Liquor is the title of a vinyl LP released by Robyn Hitchcock in 1996.

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Mother Tongue (journal)

Mother Tongue is an annual academic journal published by the Association for the Study of Language in Prehistory (ASLIP) that has been published since 1995.

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Motherwell

Motherwell (Mitherwall, Tobar na Màthar) is a large town and former burgh in North Lanarkshire, Scotland, south east of Glasgow.

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Motilal Banarsidass

Motilal Banarsidass (MLBD) is a leading Indian publishing house on Sanskrit and Indology since 1903, located in Delhi, India.

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Motu One (Marquesas Islands)

Motu One (Marquesan for "Sand Island"; Îlot de Sable) is the name of a small sandbank with no vegetation located on the western edge of a coral reef.

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Mound

A mound is a heaped pile of earth, gravel, sand, rocks, or debris.

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Mound Builders

The various cultures collectively termed Mound Builders were inhabitants of North America who, during a 5,000-year period, constructed various styles of earthen mounds for religious, ceremonial, burial, and elite residential purposes.

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Mound of Dam Dam Peer

Mound of Dam Dam Peer (দমদম পীরের ঢিবি) is an ancient archaeological heritage at Manirampur Upazila of Jessore District in the Division of Khulna, Bangladesh.

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Moundville Archaeological Museum

The Moundville Archaeological Museum is an archaeological park and museum in Moundville, Alabama The museum houses artifacts and displays exhibits on over 60 years of archaeological excavations and investigations in the Moundville Archaeological Park.

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Moundville Archaeological Site

Moundville Archaeological Site, also known as the Moundville Archaeological Park, is a Mississippian culture site on the Black Warrior River in Hale County, near the city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

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Mount Alveria

Mount Alveria is a mountain located in the Province of Siracusa, south-eastern Sicily, Italy.

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Mount Carmel

Mount Carmel (הַר הַכַּרְמֶל, Har HaKarmel ISO 259-3 Har ha Karmell (lit. God's vineyard); الكرمل, Al-Kurmul, or جبل مار إلياس, Jabal Mar Elyas (lit. Mount Saint Elias/Elijah) is a coastal mountain range in northern Israel stretching from the Mediterranean Sea towards the southeast. The range is a UNESCO biosphere reserve. A number of towns are situated there, most notably the city of Haifa, Israel's third largest city, located on the northern slope. The name is presumed to be directly from the Hebrew language word Carmel (כַּרְמֶל), which means "fresh" (planted), or "vineyard" (planted).

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Mount Elizabeth Archeological Site

The Mount Elizabeth Archeological Site, also known as Racey's Tuckahoe, St.

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Mount Hombori

Mount Hombori (Hombori Tondo) is a mountain in Mali's Mopti Region, near the town of Hombori.

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Mount Juktas

A mountain in north-central Crete, Mount Juktas (Γιούχτας - Giouchtas), also spelled Iuktas, Iouktas, or Ioukhtas, was an important religious site for the Minoan civilization.

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Mount Pelly

Mount Pelly or Pelly Mountain (Inuinnaqtun: Ovayok or Uvajuq) is an esker in Kitikmeot, Nunavut.

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Mount Tambora

Mount Tambora (or Tomboro) is an active stratovolcano on Sumbawa, one of the Lesser Sunda Islands of Indonesia.

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Mount Trumbull Wilderness

The Mount Trumbull Wilderness is a 7,880 acre (31 km2) wilderness area located on the Uinkaret Plateau in the Arizona Strip.

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Mountain Club of South Africa

The Mountain Club of South Africa (MCSA) is the largest and oldest mountaineering club in South Africa.

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Mountain Meadow Ranch

Mountain Meadow Ranch, (MMR), is a family-owned two-week summer camp for boys and girls aged 7–17, located near Susanville, California, United States, on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada, 75 miles northwest of Reno, Nevada.

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Movius Line

The Movius Line is a theoretical line drawn across northern India first proposed by the American archaeologist Hallam L. Movius in 1948 to demonstrate a technological difference between the early prehistoric tool technologies of the east and west of the Old World.

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Mr. Know-It-All

Mr.

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Mrauk U

Mrauk U (formerly known as Mrohaung) is an archaeologically important town in northern Rakhine State, Myanmar.

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Mrinal Pande

Mrinal Pande (born 1946) is an Indian television personality, journalist and author, and until 2009 chief editor of Hindi daily Hindustan.

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Mtaileb

Mtaileb or Mtayleb (المطيلب) is a suburb north of Beirut in the Matn District of Mount Lebanon Governorate in Lebanon.

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Muazzez İlmiye Çığ

Muazzez İlmiye Çığ, née Muazzez İlmiye İtil, (born 20 June 1914, Bursa, Turkey) is a Turkish archaeologist and Assyriologist who specializes in the study of Sumerian civilization.

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Muğla Museum

Muğla Museum is a museum in Muğla, Turkey.

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Much Wenlock

Much Wenlock is a small town and parish in Shropshire, England, situated on the A458 road between Shrewsbury and Bridgnorth.

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Mucirama

The Civic Museum Raffaele Marrocco (Museo Civico Raffaele Marrocco) known as Mucirama; stylised MuCiRaMa or Mu.Ci.Ra.Ma is an archaeology and arts museum based in the town of Piedimonte Matese in the Province of Caserta, in the Region of Campania, Italy.

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Mudéjar

Mudéjar (Mudèjar, مدجن trans. Mudajjan, "tamed; domesticated") is also the name given to Moors or Muslims of Al-Andalus who remained in Iberia after the Christian Reconquista but were not initially forcibly converted to Christianity.

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Mudbrick

A mudbrick or mud-brick is a brick, made of a mixture of loam, mud, sand and water mixed with a binding material such as rice husks or straw.

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Muhibbe Darga

Muhibbe Darga (13 June 1921 – 6 March 2018) was a Turkish archaeologist.

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Muiredach's High Cross

Muiredach's High Cross is a high cross from the 10th or possibly 9th century, located at the ruined monastic site of Monasterboice, in County Louth, Ireland.

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Muisca agriculture

The Muisca agriculture describes the agriculture of the Muisca, the advanced civilisation that was present in the times before the Spanish conquest on the high plateau in the Colombian Andes; the Altiplano Cundiboyacense.

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Muisca architecture

This article describes the architecture of the Muisca.

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Muisca Confederation

The Muisca Confederation was a loose confederation of different Muisca rulers (zaques, zipas, iraca and tundama) in the central Andean highlands of present-day Colombia before the Spanish conquest of northern South America.

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Muisca mummification

This article describes the practice of mummification by the Muisca.

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Muk Wu

Muk Wu Village in Ta Kwu Ling is situated in the north of the New Territories across the Man Kam To border crossing point in Hong Kong.

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Mulri Hills

Mulri Hills are located in Gulshan Town, Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan.

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Multnomah people

The Multnomah are a tribe of Chinookan people who live in the area of Portland, Oregon, in the United States.

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Mumbles (district)

Mumbles is a district of Swansea, Wales located on the south east corner of the unitary authority area.

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Mummy of San Andrés

The Mummy of San Andrés is a human mummy belonging to the Guanche culture, who were the ancient inhabitants of the Canary Islands, Spain.

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Mummy paper

Mummy paper is paper that is claimed to be made from the linen wrappings and other fibers (e.g. papyrus) from Egyptian mummies imported to America circa 1855.

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Mumun pottery period

The Mumun pottery period is an archaeological era in Korean prehistory that dates to approximately 1500-300 BC This period is named after the Korean name for undecorated or plain cooking and storage vessels that form a large part of the pottery assemblage over the entire length of the period, but especially 850-550 BC.

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Muna al-Sheemi

Muna al-Sheemi (born 1968) is an Egyptian writer.

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Mundigak

Mundigak (مونډي ګاګ), in Kandahar, Afghanistan, is an archaeological site in Kandahar province in Afghanistan.

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Mungo National Park

The Mungo National Park is a protected national park that is located in south-western New South Wales, in eastern Australia.

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Munhata

Munhata (Horvat Minha or Khirbet Munhata) is an archaeological site south of Lake Tiberias, Israel on the north bank and near the outlet of Nahal Tavor (Tabor Stream) on a terrace below sea level.

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Municipality of Idrija

The Municipality of Idrija (Občina Idrija) is a municipality in the Gorizia region of western Slovenia.

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Munshiram Manoharlal

Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt.

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Murder of Sarah Payne

Sarah Evelyn Isobel Payne (13 October 1991 – c. 1 July 2000), an 8-year-old school girl, was the victim of a high-profile abduction and murder in England in July 2000.

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Murray Gell-Mann

Murray Gell-Mann (born September 15, 1929) is an American physicist who received the 1969 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles.

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Murray Springs Clovis Site

Murray Springs is located in southern Arizona near the San Pedro River and once served as a Clovis hunting camp approximately 9000 years BCE.

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Musawwarat es-Sufra

Musawwarat es-Sufra (Arabic:المصورات الصفراء, Meroitic: Aborepi, Old Egyptian: jbrp, jpbr-ˁnḫ), also known as Al-Musawarat Al-Sufra, is a large Meroitic temple complex in modern Sudan, dating back to the 3rd century BC.

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Musée archéologique (Brumath)

The Musée archéologique is an archaeological museum in Brumath in the Bas-Rhin department of France.

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Musée archéologique (Strasbourg)

The Musée archéologique of Strasbourg, France is the largest of the numerous Alsacian museums displaying regional archeological findings from Prehistory to the Merovingian dynasty.

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Musée Arménien de France

The Musée Arménien de France is a private museum of Armenian art and archaeology located in the 16th arrondissement of Paris at Fondation Nourhan Fringhian, 59 avenue Foch, Paris, France.

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Musée d'Art et d'Histoire (Geneva)

The Musée d’Art et d’Histoire (Museum of Art and History) is the largest art museum in Geneva, Switzerland.

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Musée de l'Arles et de la Provence antiques

The Musée de l'Arles antique or Musée départemental Arles antique or Musée de l'Arles et de la Provence antiques is an archeological museum housed in a modern building designed and built in 1995 by the architect Henri Ciriani, at Arles in the Bouches-du-Rhône département of France.

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Musée historique de Haguenau

The Musée historique (Historical museum) is one of the three museums of Haguenau, France.

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Musconetcong River

The Musconetcong River is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Museo Archeologico Ostiense

The Museo Archeologico Ostiense (or Archaeological Museum of Ostia) is an archaeological museum dedicated to the ancient Roman city of Ostia in Rome, Italy.

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Museo archeologico regionale Paolo Orsi

The Museo Archeologico Regionale Paolo Orsi of Syracuse, Sicily is one of the principal archaeological museums of Europe.

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Museo Arqueológico de Santiago

Museo Arqueologico de Santiago (English: Archaeological Museum of Santiago) is an archaeology museum located in the Plaza Mulato Gil de Castro area of Santiago, Chile.

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Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino

The Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino (English: Chilean Museum of Pre-Columbian Art) is an art museum dedicated to the study and display of pre-Columbian artworks and artifacts from Central and South America.

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Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre

Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre (MNH), (Museum of Nature and Man in English), is a museum based in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, (Canary Islands, Spain).

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Museo Egizio

The Museo Egizio is an archaeological museum in Turin, Piedmont, Italy, specialising in Egyptian archaeology and anthropology.

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Museo Histórico y Antropológico Maurice van de Maele

Museo Histórico y Antropológico Maurice van de Maele or (Spanish for Historical and Anthropologic Museum Maurice van de Maele) is an anthropology and history museum in Valdivia run by Universidad Austral de Chile.

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Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología

The Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología (MUNAE; National Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology) is a national museum of Guatemala, dedicated to the conservation of archaeological and ethnological artifacts and research into Guatemala's history and cultural heritage.

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Museo Picasso Málaga

The Museo Picasso Málaga is a museum in Málaga, Andalusia, Spain, the city where artist Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born.

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Museo Provinciale di Torcello

The Provincial Museum of Torcello (in Italian: Museo Provinciale di Torcello) is a museum founded at the end of 19th century on the Venetian island of Torcello.

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Museo Regional del Sureste de Petén

The Museo Regional del Sureste de Petén ("Southeastern Petén Regional Museum") is an archaeological museum in the town of Dolores in the Petén Department of Guatemala.

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Museu da Lourinhã

Museu da Lourinhã is a museum in the town of Lourinhã, west Portugal.

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Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi

The Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi is a Brazilian research institution and museum located in the city of Belém, state of Pará.

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Museum

A museum (plural musea or museums) is an institution that cares for (conserves) a collection of artifacts and other objects of artistic, cultural, historical, or scientific importance.

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Museum anthropology

Museum anthropology is a domain of scholarship and professional practice in the discipline of anthropology.

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Museum de Oude Wolden

Museum de Oude Wolden (Wolds), abbreviated as MOW, is a regional museum in the village of Bellingwolde in the Netherlands.

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Museum der Völker

The Museum der Völker in the Austrian Schwaz in the county of Tyrol was founded in 1995 as a cultural association Haus der Völker by Gert Chesi and belongs to the well known Ethnology museums in Europe.

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Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte

The Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte or MKK (Museum of Art and Cultural History) is a municipal museum in Dortmund, Germany.

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Museum für Vor- und Frühgeschichte (Berlin)

The Museum für Vor- und Frühgeschichte ("Museum for prehistory and early history"), part of the Berlin State Museums, is one of major archaeological museums of Germany, and among the largest supra-regional collections of prehistoric finds in Europe.

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Museum Gherdëina

The Gherdëina Local Heritage Museum was opened in the Cësa di Ladins in Urtijëi, in northernmost Italy, in 1960.

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Museum of Anatolian Civilizations

The Museum of Anatolian Civilizations (Anadolu Medeniyetleri Müzesi) is located on the south side of Ankara Castle in the Atpazarı area in Ankara, Turkey.

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Museum of Antiquities

The Museum of Antiquities was an archaeological museum at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

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Museum of Antiquities (Saskatoon)

The Museum of Antiquities is an archaeological museum at the University of Saskatchewan.

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Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography

The Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography is a museum in Baku, Azerbaijan, that was established in 1976.

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Museum of Cádiz

The Museum of Cadiz is a museum located in Cádiz, Spain.

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Museum of Dacian and Roman Civilisation

The Museum of Dacian and Roman Civilisation is a museum in Deva, Romania.

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Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, Stockholm

The Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities (Östasiatiska Museet), located in Stockholm, Sweden, is a museum launched by Sweden's Parliament in 1926, with the Swedish archaeologist Johan Gunnar Andersson (1874–1960) as founding director.

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Museum of Fine Arts, Dole

The museum of fine arts and archeology of Dole was founded in 1821.

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Museum of Lebanese Prehistory

The Museum of Lebanese Prehistory (Musée de Préhistoire Libanaise) is a museum of prehistory and archaeology in Beirut, Lebanon.

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Museum of Liverpool

The Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, is the newest addition to the National Museums Liverpool group having opened in 2011 replacing the former Museum of Liverpool Life.

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Museum of Medieval Stockholm

The Museum of Medieval Stockholm (Stockholms medeltidsmuseum), centrally located north of the Royal Palace, was constructed around old monuments excavated in an extensive archaeological dig (dubbed Riksgropen, "National/State Pit") in the late 1970s.

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Museum of Natural Sciences

The Museum of Natural Sciences of Belgium (Muséum des sciences naturelles de Belgique, Museum voor Natuurwetenschappen van België) is a museum dedicated to natural history, located in Brussels, Belgium.

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Museum of Oltenia

The Museum of Oltenia (Muzeul Olteniei) is a multidisciplinary museum in the city of Craiova, Oltenia, Romania.

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Museum of Oriental Art (Turin)

The Museum of Oriental Art (Museo d'Arte Orientale, also known by the acronym MAO) is a museum located in a 17th-century palazzo in the city of Turin, Italy.

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Museum of Primitive Art and Culture

The Museum of Primitive Art and Culture is a museum in South Kingstown, Rhode Island, United States.

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Museum of Roman Civilization

The Museum of the Roman Civilization (Italian: Museo della Civiltà Romana) is a museum in Rome (Esposizione Universale Roma district), devoted to aspects of the Ancient Roman civilization.

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Museum of the Cetinska Krajina Region

The Museum of the Cetinska Krajina Region (Muzej Cetinske krajine) in Sinj is a museum focusing on the cultural and historical heritage of the Cetinska Krajina region.

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Museum of the Nationalist Forces in Balıkesir

Museum of the Nationalist Forces in Balıkesir (Balıkesir Kuva-yi Milliye Müzesi) is a museum in Balıkesir, Turkey, dedicated to the irregular Kuva-yi Milliye (Nationalist Forces) formed as part of the Turkish National Movement during the Turkish War of Independence (1919–1923).

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Museum of the Order of St John

The Museum of the Order of St John in Clerkenwell, London, tells the story of the Venerable Order of Saint John from its roots as a pan-European Order of Hospitaller Knights founded in Jerusalem during the Crusades, to its present commitment to providing first aid and care in the community through the St John Ambulance Brigade and running an Ophthalmic Hospital in Jerusalem.

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Museum of the Puck Region

The Florian Ceynowa Museum of the Puck Region in Puck-(Muzeum Ziemi Puckiej im.) is museum presenting cultural heritage of Puck region.

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Museum of the Treasure of San Gennaro

The Treasure of San Gennaro is composed of art works and donations collected in seven centuries of Popes, Kings, Emperors, famous and ordinary people, kept in a museum in Naples, Italy.

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Museum of Tropical Queensland

The Museum of Tropical Queensland (abbreviated MTQ) is a museum of natural history, archaeology and history located in Townsville, Queensland, Australia.

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Museum Vincente Pallotti

The Museum Vicente Pallotti is located on Avenida Presidente Vargas, 115 in Santa Maria, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

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Museums in Turkey

Following the proclamation of the Republic, Turkish museums developed considerably, mainly due to the importance Atatürk had attached to the research and exhibition of artifacts of Anatolia.

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Music

Music is an art form and cultural activity whose medium is sound organized in time.

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Music archaeology

Music archaeology is an interdisciplinary study field that combines musicology and archaeology.

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Music of ancient Greece

The music of ancient Greece was almost universally present in ancient Greek society, from marriages, funerals, and religious ceremonies to theatre, folk music, and the ballad-like reciting of epic poetry.

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Music technology

Music technology is the use of any device, mechanism, machine or tool by a musician or composer to make or perform music; to compose, notate, play back or record songs or pieces; or to analyze or edit music.

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Music technology (mechanical)

Mechanical music technology is the use of any device, mechanism, machine or tool by a musician or composer to make or perform music; to compose, notate, play back or record songs or pieces; or to analyze or edit music.

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Musicology

Musicology is the scholarly analysis and research-based study of music.

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Mustard plant

Mustard plants are any of several plant species in the genera Brassica and Sinapis in the family Brassicaceae.

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Muzeum Śląska Cieszyńskiego

The Muzeum Śląska Cieszyńskiego (Museum of Cieszyn Silesia) is a museum in the town of Cieszyn, Silesian Voivodeship, Poland.

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Mycenaean pottery

Mycenaean pottery was produced from c. 1600 BC to c. 1000 BC by Mycenaean Greek potters.

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Mykhaylo Maksymovych

Mykhaylo Oleksandrovych Maksymovych (Михайло Олександрович Максимович; Михаил Александрович Максимович; 3 September 1804 – 10 November 1873) was a famous professor in plant biology, historian and writer in the Russian Empire of a Ukrainian Cossack background.

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Mykola Biliashivsky

Mykola Fedotovich Biliashivsky (24 October 1867, Uman – 21 April 1926, Kiev) was a Ukrainian archaeologist, ethnographer, and art historian.

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Mykolayiv Regional Museum of Local History

Mykolayiv Regional Museum of Local History “Staroflotski Barracks” is one of the oldest museums in Ukraine.

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Mysteries of the Bible

Mysteries of the Bible is an hour-long television series that was originally broadcast by A&E from March 25, 1994 until June 13, 1998 and aired reruns until 2002.

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Mythago Wood

Mythago Wood is a fantasy novel by British writer Robert Holdstock, published in the United Kingdom in 1984.

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Mythology and legacy of Benjamin Banneker

According to accounts that began to appear during the 1960s or earlier, a substantial mythology exaggerating Benjamin Banneker's accomplishments has developed during the two centuries that have elapsed since he lived (1731-1806).

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Mytilene

Mytilene (Μυτιλήνη) is a city founded in the 11th century BC.

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N. G. Majumdar

Nani Gopal Majumdar (1 December 1897 – 11 November 1938) was an Indian archaeologist who is credited with having discovered 62 Indus Valley Civilization sites in Sindh including Chanhudaro.

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N. P. Chakravarti

Niranjan Prasad Chakravarti OBE (1 July 1893 – 19 October 1956) was an Indian archaeologist who served as Chief epigraphist to the Government of India in 1934 to 1940 and as Director-general of the Archaeological Survey of India from 1948 to 1950.

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N. S. Rajaram

Navaratna Srinivasa Rajaram (born 1943 in Mysore) is an Indian mathematician, notable for his publications with the Voice of India publishing house focusing on the "Indigenous Aryans" debate in Indian politics, in some instances in co-authorship with David Frawley.

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Naacal

Naacal is the name of an ancient people and civilization first claimed to have existed by Augustus Le Plongeon and later by James Churchward.

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Nabi Bakhsh Khan Baloch

Nabi Bakhsh Khan Baloch (نبي بخش خان بلوچ) (16 December 1917 – 6 April 2011) was a research scholar and writer.

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Nabta Playa

Nabta Playa was once a large internally drained basin in the Nubian Desert, located approximately 800 kilometers south of modern-day Cairo or about 100 kilometers west of Abu Simbel in southern Egypt, 22.51° north, 30.73° east.

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Nac Mac Feegle

The Nac Mac Feegle (also sometimes known as Pictsies, Wee Free Men, and the Little Men) are a type of fairy folk that appear in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels Carpe Jugulum, The Wee Free Men, A Hat Full of Sky, Wintersmith, I Shall Wear Midnight, Snuff, and The Shepherd's Crown.

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Nadur

Nadur (In-Nadur) is a village in Gozo, Malta.

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Nahal Hemar

Nahal Hemar is an archeological cave site in Israel, on a cliff, near the dead sea, just northwest of Mt.

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Nahf

Nahf (نحف, Naḥf or Nahef; נַחְף) is an Arab town in the Northern District of Israel.

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Nahman Avigad

Nahman Avigad (Hebrew: נחמן אביגד, September 25, 1905 – January 28, 1992), born in Zawalow, Galicia (then Austria, now Zavaliv, Ukraine), was an Israeli archaeologist.

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Nailsea

Nailsea is a town in the unitary authority of North Somerset in the ceremonial county of Somerset, England, approximately southwest of Bristol and about northeast of the seaside resort of Weston-super-Mare.

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Nailsea Glassworks

Nailsea Glassworks was a glass manufacturing factory in Nailsea in the English county of Somerset.

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Nakhchivan State Museum of History

Nakhchivan State Museum of History (Naxçıvan Dövlət Tarix Muzeyi) is a museum of history of Nakhchivan, established in 1924.

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Nakhchivan Tepe

Nakhchivan Tepe — located at the right bank of Naxçıvançay.

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Nala Sopara

Nala Sopara, associated with Shurparaka (lit. city of braves) and formerly known as Sopara, is a town within the Mumbai Metropolitan Region.

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Nancy Dupree

Nancy Hatch Dupree (October 3, 1927 – September 10, 2017) was an American historian whose work primarily focused on the history of modern Afghanistan.

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Nancy Edwards

Nancy Margaret Edwards, (born 8 January 1954) is a British archaeologist and academic, who specialises in medieval archaeology and ecclesiastical history.

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Nancy Sandars

Nancy Katharine Sandars, (29 June 1914 – 20 November 2015) was a British archaeologist and prehistorian.

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Nancy Thomson de Grummond

Nancy Thomson de Grummond is the M. Lynette Thompson Professor of Classics and Distinguished Research Professor at Florida State University.

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Nanih Waiya

Nanih Waiya (alternately spelled Nunih Waya) is an ancient earthwork mound in southern Winston County, Mississippi, constructed by indigenous people during the Middle Woodland period, about 1-300 CE.

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Nansemond

The Nansemond are a Native American tribe recognized by the Commonwealth of Virginia, along with ten other Virginia Indian tribes.

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Nanshin-ron

The was a political doctrine in the Empire of Japan which stated that Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands were Japan's sphere of interest and that the potential value to the Japanese Empire for economic and territorial expansion in those areas was greater than elsewhere.

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Nantgarw Pottery

The Nantgarw Pottery was a noted pottery, located in Nantgarw on the eastern bank of the Glamorganshire Canal, north of Cardiff in the River Taff valley, Glamorganshire, Wales.

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Nanumanga

Nanumanga or Nanumaga is a reef island and a district of the Oceanian island nation of Tuvalu.

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Nanzdietschweiler

Nanzdietschweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Naomi Robson

Naomi Robson (born 4 December 1961) is an Australian television presenter who is best known as the former presenter of the east coast edition of Today Tonight, an Australian current affairs program which was broadcast on weeknights on the Seven Network, from 1997 to 2006.

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Narmer Palette

The Narmer Palette, also known as the Great Hierakonpolis Palette or the Palette of Narmer, is a significant Egyptian archeological find, dating from about the 31st century BC.

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Narosura

Narosura is a settlement in Kenya's Narok County in Narok South district approximately 42 miles south of Narok Town.

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Narrabeen Man

Narrabeen Man is the name given to a 4,000-year-old skeleton of a tall Australian Aboriginal man found during road works in Narrabeen, a coastal suburb North of Sydney, in January 2005.

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Narragansett people

The Narragansett tribe are an Algonquian American Indian tribe from Rhode Island.

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Nashville, Arkansas

Nashville is a city in Howard County, Arkansas, United States.

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Nasirpur

Nasarpur, is a small village in the Sindh province of Pakistan.

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Natana Kasinathan

Natana Kasinthan is an Indian historian, archaeologist, author and epigraphist who is known for his work on inscriptions of Tamil Nadu.

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Natchez people

The Natchez (Natchez pronunciation) are a Native American people who originally lived in the Natchez Bluffs area in the Lower Mississippi Valley, near the present-day city of Natchez, Mississippi in the United States.

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Nathaniel Sylvester

Nathaniel Sylvester (1610-1680) was an Anglo-Dutch sugar merchant and the first European settler of Shelter Island.

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National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

The National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA;Εθνικὸν καὶ Καποδιστριακόν Πανεπιστήμιον Ἀθηνῶν, Ethnikón kai Kapodistriakón Panepistímion Athinón), usually referred to simply as the University of Athens (UoA), is a public university in Zografou, a suburb of Athens, Greece.

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National Anthropological Archives

The National Anthropological Archives is a collection of historical and contemporary documents maintained by the Smithsonian Institution, which document the history of anthropology and the world's peoples and cultures.

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National Archaeological Museum (Bulgaria)

The National Archaeological Museum (Национален археологически музей, Natsionalen arheologicheski muzey) is an archaeological museum in the centre of Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.

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National Archaeological Museum (Florence)

The National Archaeological Museum of Florence (Italian – Museo archeologico nazionale di Firenze) is an archaeological museum in Florence, Italy.

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National Archaeological Museum (France)

The musée d'Archéologie nationale is a major French archeology museum, covering pre-historic times to the Merovingian period.

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National Archaeological Museum of the Marche Region

The National Archaeological Museum of the Marche Region (Museo archeologico nazionale delle Marche) is an archaeological museum in the port of Ancona, Marche, Italy.

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National Archaeological Museum, Naples

The National Archaeological Museum of Naples (italic, sometimes abbreviated to MANN) is an important Italian archaeological museum, particularly for ancient Roman remains.

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National Archaeology Museum (Portugal)

The National Museum of Archaeology (Portugal) (Museu Nacional de Arqueologia) is the largest Archaeological museum in Portugal and one of the most important museums in the world devoted to ancient art found in the Iberian Peninsula.

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National Capital Area Council

The National Capital Area Council (NCAC) is a local council of the Boy Scouts of America within the Northeast Region that serves Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, and the United States Virgin Islands.

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National Fund for Scientific Research

The National Fund for Scientific Research (NFSR) (Dutch: NFWO, French: FNRS) was once a government institution in Belgium for supporting scientific research until it was split into two separate organizations.

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National Geographic Society

The National Geographic Society (NGS), headquartered in Washington, D.C., United States, is one of the largest non-profit scientific and educational institutions in the world.

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National Library (Vanuatu)

The National Library is the national library of Vanuatu.

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National Monument (United States)

A national monument in the United States is a protected area that is similar to a national park, but can be created from any land owned or controlled by the federal government by proclamation of the President of the United States.

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National Museum (Prague)

The National Museum (Národní muzeum) is a Czech museum institution intended to systematically establish, prepare and publicly exhibit natural scientific and historical collections.

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National Museum Cardiff

National Museum Cardiff (Amgueddfa Genedlaethol Caerdydd) is a museum and art gallery in Cardiff, Wales.

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National Museum Library

The National Museum Library is a division of the Department of National Museum in Sri Lanka functioning as its library and archive for its collection of books and documents.

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National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)

The National Museum of Anthropology (Museo Nacional de Antropología, MNA) is a national museum of Mexico.

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National Museum of Archaeology (Albania)

The National Archaeological Museum (Muzeu Arkeologjik Kombëtar) is the national archaeological museum in Tirana, Albania opened in 1 November 1948.

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National Museum of Archaeology (Bolivia)

The National Museum of Archaeology of Bolivia (Museo Nacional de Arqueología de Bolivia) is the national archaeology museum of Bolivia.

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National Museum of Archaeology, Malta

The National Museum of Archaeology is a Maltese museum of prehistoric artifacts, located in Valletta.

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National Museum of Beirut

The National Museum of Beirut (متحف بيروت الوطنيّ, Matḥaf Bayrūt al-waṭanī) is the principal museum of archaeology in Lebanon.

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National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina

The National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Zemaljski Muzej Bosne i Hercegovine / Земаљски музеј Босне и Херцеговине) is located in central Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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National Museum of Brazil

The National Museum (Museu Nacional) is the oldest scientific institution of Brazil and one of the largest museums of natural history and anthropology in the Americas.

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National Museum of Cambodia

The National Museum of Cambodia (សារមន្ទីរជាតិ) in Phnom Penh is Cambodia's largest museum of cultural history and is the country's leading historical and archaeological museum.

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National Museum of Denmark

The National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) in Copenhagen is Denmark’s largest museum of cultural history, comprising the histories of Danish and foreign cultures, alike.

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National Museum of Finland

The National Museum of Finland (Kansallismuseo, Nationalmuseum) presents Finnish history from the Stone Age to the present day, through objects and cultural history.

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National Museum of Ghana

The National Museum of Ghana is in the Ghanaian capital, Accra.

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National Museum of History of Azerbaijan

The National Museum of History of Azerbaijan (Milli Azərbaycan Tarixi Muzeyi) is the largest museum in Azerbaijan, located in Baku, in the former mansion of Azerbaijani oil magnate and philanthropist Haji Zeynalabdin Taghiyev.

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National Museum of Indonesia

The National Museum of Indonesia (Museum Nasional), is an archeological, historical, ethnological, and geographical museum located in Jalan Medan Merdeka Barat, Central Jakarta, right on the west side of Merdeka Square.

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National Museum of Iraq

The National Museum of Iraq (Arabic: المتحف العراقي) is a museum located in Baghdad, Iraq.

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National Museum of Lithuania

The National Museum of Lithuania (Lietuvos nacionalinis muziejus), established in 1952, is a state-sponsored historical museum that encompasses several significant structures and a wide collection of written materials and artifacts.

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National Museum of Mali

The National Museum of Malí (Musée national du Mali) is an archaeological and anthropological museum located in Bamako, the capital of Mali.

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National Museum of Oriental Art

The National Museum of Oriental Art (Italian: Museo Nazionale d'Arte Orientale) was an important museum in Rome, Italy, dedicated to the arts of the Orient, from the Middle East to Japan.

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National Museum of Romanian History

The National Museum of Romanian History (Muzeul Național de Istorie a României) is a museum located on Calea Victoriei in Bucharest, Romania, which contains Romanian historical artifacts from prehistoric times up to modern times.

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National Museum of San Matteo, Pisa

The National Museum of San Matteo in Pisa (Museo Nazionale di San Matteo) displays works from historic ecclesiastical buildings in the city and Province of Pisa.

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National Museum of Scotland

The National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, was formed in 2006 with the merger of the new Museum of Scotland, with collections relating to Scottish antiquities, culture and history, and the adjacent Royal Museum (so renamed in 1995), with collections covering science and technology, natural history, and world cultures.

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National Museum of Slovenia

The National Museum of Slovenia (Narodni muzej Slovenije) is located in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia.

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National Museum, New Delhi

The National Museum in New Delhi, also known as the National Museum of India, is one of the largest museums in India.

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National parks of England and Wales

The national parks of England and Wales are areas of relatively undeveloped and scenic landscape that are designated under the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act (2016).

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National Planning Policy Framework

The National Planning Policy Framework was published by the UK's Department of Communities and Local Government in March 2012, consolidating over two dozen previously issued documents called Planning Policy Statements (PPS) and Planning Policy Guidance Notes (PPG) for use in England.

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National Ranching Heritage Center

The National Ranching Heritage Center, a museum of ranching history, is located on the campus of Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas.

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National Register of Historic Places listings in Lake County, Oregon

Lake County.

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National Register of Historic Places listings in Multnomah County, Oregon

The following list presents the full set of National Register of Historic Places listings in Multnomah County, Oregon.

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National Register of Historic Places property types

The U.S. National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) classifies its listings by various types of properties.

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National Roman Museum

The National Roman Museum (Italian: Museo Nazionale Romano) is a museum, with several branches in separate buildings throughout the city of Rome, Italy.

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National Route 13 (Morocco)

The N13 road is a national highway (Route nationale) in Morocco linking Taouz near Merzouga close to the Algerian border with Azrou, Meknes and other northern locations.

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National School of Anthropology and History

National School of Anthropology and History (in Spanish: Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia, ENAH) is a Mexican Institution of higher education founded in 1938 and a prominent center for the study of Anthropology and History in the Americas.

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National University of Arts and Culture, Yangon

The National University of Arts and Culture, Yangon (အမျိုးသားယဉ်ကျေးမှုနှင့် အနုပညာတက္ကသိုလ် (ရန်ကုန်)) is a public university, located in Yangon, Myanmar, that offers bachelor's and post-graduate degree programs in traditional Burmese performing and visual arts.

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Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), Pub.

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Native American tribes in Virginia

The Native American tribes in Virginia are the indigenous tribes who currently live or have historically lived in what is now the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States of America.

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Native cuisine of Hawaii

Native Hawaiian cuisine is based on the traditional Hawaiian foods that predate contact with Europeans and immigration from East and Southeast Asia.

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Natural (archaeology)

In archaeology, natural is a term to denote a layer (stratum) in the stratigraphic record where there is no evidence of anthropogenic activity.

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Natural dye

Natural dyes are dyes or colorants derived from plants, invertebrates, or minerals.

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Natural Environment Research Council

The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) is a British Research Council that supports research, training and knowledge transfer activities in the environmental sciences.

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Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County is the largest natural and historical museum in the western United States.

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Nature (journal)

Nature is a British multidisciplinary scientific journal, first published on 4 November 1869.

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Naulakha Pavilion

The Naulakha Pavilion is a white marble personal chamber with a curvilinear roof, located beside the Sheesh Mahal courtyard, in the northern section of the Lahore Fort in Lahore, Pakistan.

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Nautical Archaeology Society

The Nautical Archaeology Society (NAS) is a charity registered in England and Wales The Nautical Archaeology Society is registered charity number 264209 and in Scotland and is a company limited by guarantee.

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Navahrudak

Navahrudak (Навагрудак), more commonly known by its Russian name Novogrudok (Новогрудок) (Naugardukas; Nowogródek; נאָווהאַרדאָק Novhardok) is a city in the Grodno Region of Belarus.

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Navajo

The Navajo (British English: Navaho, Diné or Naabeehó) are a Native American people of the Southwestern United States.

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Navajo Nation Museum

The Navajo Nation Museum is a modern museum and library on Navajo ground in Window Rock, Arizona.

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Navajo pueblitos

The term Navajo Pueblitos, also known as Dinétah Pueblitos, refers to a class of archaeological sites that are found in the northwestern corner of the American state of New Mexico.

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Navarino Island

Navarino Island is a Chilean island located between Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, to the north, and Cape Horn, to the south.

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Nayanjot Lahiri

Nayanjot Lahiri is a historian and archaeologist of ancient India and a professor of history at Ashoka University.

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Naysān (Iraq)

Naysān (also known as Jabal Khayabar and Naisān) is a tell and an archaeological site in Maysan Governorate, southern Iraq.

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Nazareth

Nazareth (נָצְרַת, Natzrat; النَّاصِرَة, an-Nāṣira; ܢܨܪܬ, Naṣrath) is the capital and the largest city in the Northern District of Israel.

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Nazca culture

The Nazca culture (also Nasca) was the archaeological culture that flourished from beside the arid, southern coast of Peru in the river valleys of the Rio Grande de Nazca drainage and the Ica Valley.

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Nazca Lines

The Nazca Lines are a series of large ancient geoglyphs in the Nazca Desert, in southern Peru.

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Nålebinding

Nålebinding (Danish: literally "binding with a needle" or "needle-binding", also naalbinding, nålbinding, nålbindning or naalebinding) is a fabric creation technique predating both knitting and crochet.

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Near Eastern archaeology

Near Eastern Archaeology (sometimes known as Middle Eastern archaeology) is a regional branch of the wider, global discipline of archeology.

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Near Eastern Archaeology (journal)

Near Eastern Archaeology is an American journal covering art, archaeology, history, anthropology, literature, philology, and epigraphy of the Near Eastern and Mediterranean worlds from the Palaeolithic through Ottoman periods.

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Near-surface geophysics

Near-surface geophysics is the use of geophysical methods to investigate small-scale features in the shallow (tens of meters) subsurface.

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Neath Abbey

Neath Abbey (Abaty Nedd) was a Cistercian monastery, located near the present-day town of Neath in South Wales, UK.

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Neba'a Faour

Neba'a Faour, Tell Neba'a Faour, Mashna'et el Faour, Neba Faour or Nebaa Faour is a large, low-lying archaeological tell mound in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon inhabited in the late 7th and early 6th millennium BC.

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Nebi Safa

Nebi Safa, Nabi Safa, Neby Sufa, An Nabi Safa, An Nabi Safa' or En Nabi Safa also known as Mazraet Selsata or Thelthatha is a village in the Kfar Mishki municipality situated west of Rashaya in the Rashaya District of the Beqaa Governorate in Lebanon.

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Ned Kelly

Edward "Ned" Kelly (December 1854 – 11 November 1880) was an Australian bushranger, outlaw, gang leader and convicted police murderer.

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Neder-Betuwe

Neder-Betuwe is a municipality in Gelderland, in the east of the Netherlands.

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Neferneferuaten

Ankhkheperure-mery-Neferkheperure/ -mery-Waenre/ -mery-Aten Neferneferuaten was a name used to refer to either Meritaten or, more likely, Nefertiti.

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Nefertiti

Neferneferuaten Nefertiti (c. 1370 – c. 1330 BC) was an Egyptian queen and the Great Royal Wife (chief consort) of Akhenaten, an Egyptian Pharaoh.

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Neher–Elseffer House

The Neher–Elseffer House is located on U.S. Route 9 a short distance north of its intersection with New York State Route 9G in Rhinebeck, New York, United States.

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Neideck Castle

Neideck Castle (Burgruine Neideck) is a former high mediaeval nobleman's castle above the village of, in the municipality of Wiesenttal in the Upper Franconian county of Forchheim in the German state of Bavaria.

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Neil Asher Silberman

Neil Asher Silberman (born June 19, 1950 in Boston, Massachusetts) is an archaeologist and historian with a special interest in history, archaeology, public interpretation and heritage policy.

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Neil Christie

Dr Neil Christie is a British archaeologist and historian, and a Professor in Archeology at the University of Leicester.

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Neil Faulkner (archaeologist)

Neil Faulkner, FSA is a British archaeologist, historian, writer, lecturer, broadcaster, and political activist.

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Neil Judd

Neil Merton Judd (1887–1976) was an American archaeologist who studied under the archaeologist of the American Southwest, Edgar Lee Hewett.

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Neil Oliver

Neil Oliver (born 21 February 1967) is a British television presenter, free-lance archaeologist, conservationist and author.

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Neil Price (archaeologist)

Neil Stuppel Price is an English archaeologist specialising in the study of Viking Age Scandinavia and the archaeology of shamanism.

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Nels C. Nelson

Nels Christian Nelson (April 9, 1875 – March 5, 1964) was a Danish-American archaeologist.

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Nelson Glueck

Nelson Glueck (June 4, 1900 – February 12, 1971) was an American rabbi, academic and archaeologist.

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Nelson's Island

Nelson's Island is an island located in Abū Qīr Bay, off the coast of Alexandria, Egypt.

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Neman culture

Archaeologists use the name Neman culture to refer to two archaeological cultures (7th to 3rd millennium BC) which existed in the Mesolithic and continued into the middle Neolithic.

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Nemgiri

Nemgiri is a place in Jintur taluka of Parbhani district of Maharashtra state of India.

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Nemocón

Nemocón is a municipality and town of Colombia in the Central Savanna Province, part of the department of Cundinamarca.

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Nemrik 9

Nemrik 9 is an early Neolithic archeological site in the Dohuk Governorate in the north of modern-day Iraq.

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Nenana River

The Nenana River (Nina No’) is a tributary of the Tanana River, approximately long, in central Alaska in the United States.

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Nenana Valley

Nenana Valley is an archaeological site in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of Alaska.

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Neo-Attic

Neo-Attic or Atticizing is a sculptural style, beginning in Hellenistic sculpture and vase-painting of the 2nd century BCE and climaxing in Roman art of the 2nd century CE, copying, adapting or closely following the style shown in reliefs and statues of the Classical (5th–4th centuries BCE) and Archaic (6th century BCE) periods.

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Neoevolutionism

Neoevolutionism as a social theory attempts to explain the evolution of societies by drawing on Charles Darwin's theory of evolution while discarding some dogmas of the previous theories of social evolutionism.

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Neolithic and Bronze Age rock art in the British Isles

In the Neolithic and Bronze Age British Isles, rock art was produced across various parts of the islands.

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Neolithic architecture

Neolithic architecture refers to structures encompassing housing and shelter from approximately 10,000 to 2,000 BC, the Neolithic period.

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Neolithic British Isles

The Neolithic British Isles refers to the period of British, Irish and Manx history that spanned from circa 4000 to circa 2,500 BCE.

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Neolithic Europe

Neolithic Europe is the period when Neolithic technology was present in Europe, roughly between 7000 BCE (the approximate time of the first farming societies in Greece) and c. 1700 BCE (the beginning of the Bronze Age in northwest Europe).

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Neolithic long house

The 'Neolithic long house' was a long, narrow timber dwelling built by the first farmers in Europe beginning at least as early as the period 5000 to 6000 BC.

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Neretva

The Neretva (Неретва), also known as the Narenta, is the largest river of the eastern part of the Adriatic basin.

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Neriah

Neriah ("Lord is my Lamp") is the son of Mahseiah, as well as the father of Baruch and Seraiah ben Neriah, mentioned in the Book of Jeremiah of the Hebrew Bible.

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Neritan Ceka

Neritan Ceka (born 11 February 1941) is an Albanian archaeologist, professor, and politician.

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Nerzweiler

Nerzweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Nespos

NESPOS is an open source information platform about Pleistocene humans, providing detailed information about important sites, their analytical results, archaeological findings and a selection of literary quotes.

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NetHack

NetHack is a single-player roguelike video game originally released in 1987 with ASCII graphics.

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Neuchâtel

Neuchâtel, or Neuchatel; (neu(f) "new" and chatel "castle" (château); Neuenburg; Neuchâtel; Neuchâtel or Neufchâtel)The city was also called Neuchâtel-outre-Joux (Neuchâtel beyond Joux) to distinguish it from another Neuchâtel in Burgundy, now Neuchâtel-Urtière.

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Neuerkirch

Neuerkirch is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Neum

Neum (Неум) is a town and municipality located in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Neuse River

The Neuse River is a river rising in the Piedmont of North Carolina and emptying into Pamlico Sound below New Bern.

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Neutral Nation

The Neutral Confederacy or Neutral Nation or Neutral people were a Iroquoian-speaking North American indigenous people who lived near the northern shores of Lake Ontario and Lake Erie, on the west side of the Niagara River, west of the Tabacco Nation.

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Neutron activation analysis

Neutron activation analysis (NAA) is a nuclear process used for determining the concentrations of elements in a vast amount of materials.

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Neuwied

Neuwied is a town in the north of the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, capital of the District of Neuwied.

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Nevado de Toluca

Nevado de Toluca (Spanish) is a large stratovolcano in central Mexico, located about west of Mexico City near the city of Toluca.

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Nevşehir Museum

Nevşehir Museum (Nevşehir Müzesi) is in Nevşehir, Turkey Nevşehir is the provencial center in the region which is the Capadocia of the antiquity and known for its fairy chimneys.

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Neverlake

Neverlake is a 2013 Italian slasher horror film and the feature film directorial debut of Riccardo Paoletti.

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Neville archaeological site

Neville is an archaeological site on the bank of the Merrimack River in New Hampshire in the United States.

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Neville Chittick

Dr.

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New Bulgarian University

New Bulgarian University (Нов български университет, also known and abbreviated as НБУ, NBU) is a private university based in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.

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New Classification Scheme for Chinese Libraries

The New Classification Scheme for Chinese Libraries is a system of library classification developed by Yung-Hsiang Lai since 1956.

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New College, Swindon

New College is a further and higher education institution, founded in 1983 and located in Swindon, England.

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New Downs

New Downs is a farm near Camborne and St Agnes in Cornwall, England.

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New Echota

New Echota was the capital of the Cherokee Nation from 1825 to their forced removal in the 1830s.

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New Guinea singing dog

The New Guinea singing dog or New Guinea Highland dog (Canis lupus dingo or Canis familiaris) is a type of rare dog native to the New Guinea Highlands of the island of New Guinea.

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New Jersey State Museum

The New Jersey State Museum is located at 205 West State Street in Trenton, New Jersey, overlooking the Delaware River.

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New Mexico Highlands University

New Mexico Highlands University (NMHU) is a public comprehensive university located in Las Vegas, New Mexico, United States.

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New Philadelphia Town Site

The New Philadelphia Town Site is the original site of the now-vanished town of "New Philadelphia", Illinois.

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New River State Park

New River State Park is a North Carolina state park in Ashe County, North Carolina in the United States.

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New Romney

New Romney is a small town in Kent, England, on the edge of Romney Marsh, an area of flat, rich agricultural land reclaimed from the sea after the harbour began to silt up.

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New Testament

The New Testament (Ἡ Καινὴ Διαθήκη, trans. Hē Kainḕ Diathḗkē; Novum Testamentum) is the second part of the Christian biblical canon, the first part being the Old Testament, based on the Hebrew Bible.

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New Testament places associated with Jesus

The New Testament narrative of the life of Jesus refers to a number of locations in the Holy Land and a Flight into Egypt.

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New West Indian Guide

The New West Indian Guide (Nieuwe West-Indische Gids) is a peer-reviewed academic journal founded by the Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies.

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New World Archaeological Foundation

The New World Archaeological Foundation (NWAF) is an archaeological organization run by Brigham Young University.

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New York State Museum

The New York State Museum is a research-backed institution in Albany, New York, United States.

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New York University Institute of Fine Arts

The New York University Institute of Fine Arts is dedicated to graduate teaching and advanced research in the history of art, archaeology and the conservation and technology of works of art.

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New Zealand swan

The New Zealand swan or poūwa (Cygnus sumnerensis) is an extinct indigenous swan from the Chatham Islands and the South Island of New Zealand.

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Newfoundland (island)

Newfoundland (Terre-Neuve) is a large Canadian island off the east coast of the North American mainland, and the most populous part of the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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Newgrange

Newgrange (Sí an Bhrú or Brú na Bóinne) is a prehistoric monument in County Meath, Ireland, located west of Drogheda on the north side of the River Boyne.

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Newport Ship

The Newport Ship is a mid-fifteenth-century sailing vessel discovered by archaeologists in June 2002 in the city of Newport, South East Wales.

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Ngwenya Mine

The Ngwenya Mine is located on Bomvu Ridge, northwest of Mbabane and near the north-western border of Swaziland.

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Niède Guidon

Niède Guidon is a Brazilian archaeologist who was born on the 12 March 1933 in Jaú, in the state of São Paulo, Brazil.

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Nibiru cataclysm

The Nibiru cataclysm is a supposed disastrous encounter between the Earth and a large planetary object (either a collision or a near-miss) which certain groups believe will take place in the early 21st century.

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NiBiRu: Age of Secrets

NiBiRu: Age of Secrets is a 2005 adventure game developed by Future Games and published by The Adventure Company.

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Nicaea, Punjab

Nicaea was a city in what is now the Punjab, one of the two cities founded by Alexander the Great on opposite sides of the Hydaspes river.

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Niche construction

Niche construction is the process by which an organism alters its own (or another species') local environment.

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Nicholas Conard

Nicholas J. Conard, (born July 23, 1961 in Cincinnati) is an American and naturalized German citizen who works as an archaeologist and prehistorian.

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Nicholas Honerkamp

Nicholas Honerkamp is an American archaeologist whose principal fields of interest are historical archaeology, plantation archaeology, industrial archaeology and archaeological method and theory.

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Nicholas J. Saunders

Nicholas J. Saunders is a British academic archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Nicholas Millet

Dr.

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Nicholas Murray (Presbyterian)

Nicholas Murray (1802–1861) was Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.

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Nicholas Nicastro

Nicholas Nicastro is an author and film critic.

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Nicholas Reeves

Carl Nicholas Reeves, FSA (born 28 September 1956), an English Egyptologist, with the Egyptian Expedition, University of Arizona.

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Nicholas Roerich

Nicholas Roerich (October 9, 1874 – December 13, 1947) – known also as Nikolai Konstantinovich Rerikh (Никола́й Константи́нович Ре́рих) – was a Russian painter, writer, archaeologist, theosophist, perceived by some in Russia as an enlightener, philosopher, and public figure, who in his youth was influenced by a movement in Russian society around the spiritual.

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Nick Merriman

Nick Merriman (born 6 June 1960) is the Director of the Horniman Museum.

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Nicky Milner

Professor Nicky Milner is an archaeologist and deputy Head of the Archaeology Department at the University of York.

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Nicola Masini

Nicola Masini (born 1965) is an Italian scientist with CNR noted for his work on exploring traces of Andean civilizations in Peru and Bolivia using spatial technologies and Remote Sensing.

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Nicolae Densușianu

Nicolae Densușianu (1846–1911) was a Transylvanian, later Romanian ethnologist and collector of Romanian folklore.

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Nicolae Iorga Prize

The Nicolae Iorga Prize (Premiul „Nicolae Iorga”) is offered by the Romanian Academy for the best work published in a year in the fields of History and Archaeology.

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Nicolae Tonitza

Nicolae Tonitza (April 13, 1886 – February 27, 1940) was a Romanian painter, engraver, lithographer, journalist and art critic.

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Nicolai Ivanovich Andrusov

Nicolai Ivanovich Andrusov (Николай Иванович Андрусов, Nikolay Ivanovich Andrusov) (December 19, 1861 – April 27, 1924) was a Ukrainian geologist, stratigrapher, and palaeontologist.

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Nicolas Coldstream

John "Nicolas" Coldstream, FBA, FSA (30 March 1927 – 21 March 2008) was an archaeologist and academic specialising in the Ancient Greek pottery of the Geometric Period.

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Nicolaus Copernicus

Nicolaus Copernicus (Mikołaj Kopernik; Nikolaus Kopernikus; Niklas Koppernigk; 19 February 1473 – 24 May 1543) was a Renaissance-era mathematician and astronomer who formulated a model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than the Earth at the center of the universe, likely independently of Aristarchus of Samos, who had formulated such a model some eighteen centuries earlier.

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Nicolay Nicolaysen

Nicolay Nicolaysen (January 14, 1817 - January 22, 1911) was a Norwegian archaeologist and Norway's first state employed antiquarian.

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Nicolò Carandini

Count Nicolò Carandini (December 6, 1896 – March 18, 1972) was the first Italian ambassador to Britain after World War II.

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Nicole Mones

Nicole Mones (born 1952) is an American novelist and food writer.

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Nicoletta Momigliano

Nicoletta Momigliano, FSA, is an archaeologist specialising in Minoan Crete and its modern reception.

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Niedenstein

Niedenstein is a small town and an officially recognized climatic spa in the Schwalm-Eder district in northern Hesse, Germany.

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Nieder Kostenz

Nieder Kostenz is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Niederalben

Niederalben is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Niederhambach

Niederhambach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Niederhausen

Niederhausen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Niederstaufenbach

Niederstaufenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Niederweiler, Rhein-Hunsrück

Niederweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Nienover

Nienover is a rural housing estate which is part of Bodenfelde.

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Nigel Goring-Morris

Adrian Nigel Goring-Morris is a British-born Archaeologist and a Professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel.

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Nigella sativa

Nigella sativa (black caraway, also known as black cumin, nigella, and kalonji) is an annual flowering plant in the family Ranunculaceae, native to south and southwest Asia.

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Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb

Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb is a 2014 American comedy adventure film directed by Shawn Levy and written by David Guion and Michael Handelman.

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Nightfall (video game)

Nightfall is an American computer game released in 1998 by Altor Systems, Inc.

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Nihon Shoki

The, sometimes translated as The Chronicles of Japan, is the second-oldest book of classical Japanese history.

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Nikola Vulić

Nikola Vulić (Никола Вулић); (Shkodër, Ottoman Empire, 27 November 1872 – Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 25 May 1945) was a Serbian historian, classical philologist, prominent archaeologist, doctor of philosophy and professor at the University of Belgrade.

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Nikolai Markovnikov

Nikolai Vladimirovich Markovnikov, also spelled Morkovnikov (Николай Владимирович Марковников (Морковников)) (1869, Kazan - 1942, location of death unknown) was a Russian architect and archaeologist, chief architect of the Moscow Kremlin in 1914-1919.

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Nikolaos Platon

Nikolaos Platon (Greek Νικόλαος Πλάτων, Anglicised Nicolas Platon; –) was a renowned Greek archaeologist.

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Nikolaos Stampolidis

Nikolaos (Nikolas) Chr.

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Nikolay Kradin

Nikolay Nikolaevich Kradin (Крадин Николай Николаевич; born in Onokhoy, Buryatia, Russian SFSR on April 17, 1962) is a Russian anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Nikolay Ovcharov

Nikolay Ovcharov (Bulgarian: Николай Овчаров) (born 1957 in Veliko Tarnovo) is a Bulgarian archaeologist and thracologist.

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Nils Hellner

Nils Hellner (born 12 February 1965 in Göttingen) is a German archaeologist and architectural historian.

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Nim Li Punit

Nim Li Punit is a Maya Classic Period site in the Toledo District of the nation of Belize, located 40 kilometres north of the town of Punta Gorda, at 16° 19' N, 88° 47' 60W.

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Nimrud

Nimrud (النمرود) is the name that Carsten NiebuhrNiebuhr wrote on:: "Bei Nimrud, einem verfallenen Castell etwa 8 Stunden von Mosul, findet man ein merkwürdigeres Werk.

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Nimrud lens

The Nimrud lens, also called Layard lens, is a 3000-year-old piece of rock crystal, which was unearthed in 1850 by Austen Henry Layard at the Assyrian palace of Nimrud, in modern-day Iraq.

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Nine Mile Canyon

Nine Mile Canyon is a canyon, approximately long, located in the counties of Carbon and Duchesne in eastern Utah, in the Western United States.

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Nine Stones, Winterbourne Abbas

The Nine Stones, also known as the Devil's Nine Stones, the Nine Ladies, or Lady Williams and her Dog, is a stone circle located near to the village of Winterbourne Abbas in the south-western English county of Dorset.

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Ninekirks

Ninekirks is the local name for St Ninian's church, Brougham, Cumbria.

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Ninian Smart

Roderick Ninian Smart (6 May 1927 – 9 January 2001) was a Scottish writer and university educator.

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Ninigret Pond

Ninigret is a coastal lagoon in Charlestown, Rhode Island, in the United States, located at.

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Nino Ferrer

Nino Agostino Arturo Maria Ferrari, known as Nino Ferrer (1934–1998), was an Italian-French singer, songwriter, and author.

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Ninon Hesse

Ninon Hesse (née Ausländer, born 18 September 1895 in Czernowitz, died 22 September 1966 in Montagnola) was an art historian and Hermann Hesse's third wife.

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Niobrara Reservation

The Niobrara Reservation is a former Indian Reservation in northeast Nebraska.

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Nipissing First Nation

The Nipissing First Nation consists of historic First Nation band governments of Ojibwe and Algonquin descent who, following succeeding cultures of ancestors, have lived in the area of Lake Nipissing in the Canadian province of Ontario for about 9,400 years.

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Nirjhar Pratapgarhi

Nirjhar Pratapgarhi is an Indian poet of Awadhi as well Hindi language and archaeologist from Pratapgarh, Uttar Pradesh, India.

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Nishapur

Nishapur or Nishabur (نیشابور, also Romanized as Nīshāpūr, Nišâpur, Nişapur, Nīshābūr, Neyshābūr, and Neeshapoor, from Middle Persian: New-Shabuhr, meaning "New City of Shapur", "Fair Shapur", or "Perfect built of Shapur") is a city in Razavi Khorasan Province, capital of the Nishapur County and former capital of Province Khorasan, in northeastern Iran, situated in a fertile plain at the foot of the Binalud Mountains.

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Nissan Terranaut

The Nissan Terranaut was a 4x4 concept car shown at the Geneva Motor Show in 2006.

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Niya ruins

The Niya ruins, is an archaeological site located about north of modern Niya Town on the southern edge of the Tarim Basin in modern-day Xinjiang, China.

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Njoro River Cave

Njoro River Cave is an archaeological site on the Mau Escarpment, Kenya, that was first excavated in 1938 by Mary Leakey and her husband Louis Leakey.

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No 1 Poultry

No 1 Poultry is an office and retail building in London.

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No Connection

"No Connection" is a science fiction short story by American writer Isaac Asimov.

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NOAAS Peirce (S 328)

NOAAS Peirce (S 328), was an American survey ship that was in commission in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) from 1970 to 1992. Previously, she had been in commission in the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1963 to 1970 as USC&GS Peirce (CSS 28). After her NOAA decommissioning, she was donated to the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum for use as the floating classroom and archaeological research ship MV Elizabeth M. Foster. She was sold for private use in 1999 and in 2001 became the yacht MV Avedonia.

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Nodena Site

The Nodena Site is an archeological site east of Wilson, Arkansas and northeast of Reverie, Tennessee in Mississippi County, Arkansas, United States.

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Nodens

Nodens (Nudens, Nodons) is a Celtic deity associated with healing, the sea, hunting and dogs.

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Non Sung District

Non Sung (โนนสูง) is a district (amphoe) in the central part of Nakhon Ratchasima Province, northeastern Thailand.

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Non-science

A non-science is an area of study that is not scientific, especially one that is not a natural science or a social science that is an object of scientific inquiry.

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Nonne

The Nonne (also Nonnenstein) is a roughly 18-metre-high, isolated, standing sandstone rock and climbing peak in Saxon Switzerland in Germany.

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Noozles

, also known as The Wondrous Koala Blinky, is a 26-episode anime by Nippon Animation Company that was originally released in Japan in 1984.

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Nordhorn

Nordhorn is the district seat of Grafschaft Bentheim in Lower Saxony's southwesternmost corner near the border with the Netherlands and the boundary with North Rhine-Westphalia.

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Nordic bread culture

Nordic bread culture has existed in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden from prehistoric time through to the present.

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Nordic Network for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies

The Nordic Network for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies (NIES) is a research network for environmental studies based primarily in the humanities.

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Nordland

Nordland (Nordlánda) is a county in Norway in the Northern Norway region, bordering Troms in the north, Trøndelag in the south, Norrbotten County in Sweden to the east, Västerbotten County to the southeast, and the Atlantic Ocean (Norwegian Sea) to the west.

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Norfolk Islanders

Norfolk Islanders also referred to as just Islanders are the inhabitants or citizens of Norfolk Island, an external territory of Australia.

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Norman Hammond

Norman Hammond (born 10 July 1944) is a British archaeologist, academic and Mesoamericanist scholar, noted for his publications and research on the pre-Columbian Maya civilization.

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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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Norman Wagner

Norman Ernest Wagner, (March 29, 1935 – December 10, 2004) was a Canadian archeologist, professor and University president.

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Norman, Oklahoma

Norman is a city in the U.S. state of Oklahoma south of downtown Oklahoma City in its metropolitan area.

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Normative model of culture

The normative model of culture is the central model in culture history, a theoretical approach to cultures in archaeology, anthropology and history.

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Norse activity in the British Isles

Norse activity in the British Isles occurred during the Early Medieval period when members of the Norse populations of Scandinavia travelled to Britain and Ireland to settle, trade or raid.

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Norske Gaardnavne

Norske Gaardnavne (English: Norwegian Farm Names) is a 19-volume set of books based on a manuscript prepared from 1897 to 1924 by Oluf Rygh, a noted professor of archaeology, philology, and history at the University of Oslo.

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Norte Chico civilization

The Norte Chico civilization (also Caral or Caral-Supe civilization)The name is disputed.

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North American Federation of Temple Youth

The North American Federation of Temple Youth (NFTY) is the organized youth movement of Reform Judaism in North America.

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North Carolina

North Carolina is a U.S. state in the southeastern region of the United States.

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North Dakota Man Camp Project

The North Dakota Man Camp Project is an interdisciplinary project aiming to document the crew camps of the Bakken Oil Patch, North Dakota.

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North Ferriby

North Ferriby is a village and civil parish in the Haltemprice area of the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.

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North Norfolk Coast Site of Special Scientific Interest

The North Norfolk Coast Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) is an area of European importance for wildlife in Norfolk, England.

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North Petherton

North Petherton is a small town and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated on the edge of the eastern foothills of the Quantocks, and close to the edge of the Somerset Levels.

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North Runcton

North Runcton is a village and a civil parish in the English county of Norfolk.

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Northampton Medieval Synagogue

The Northampton Medieval Synagogue is an archaeological site and medieval synagogue building in Sheep Street, Northampton, England.

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Northeast African lion

The Northeast African lion (Panthera leo leo × Panthera leo melanochaita) is a population of lions in Northeast Africa.

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Northeast El Paso

Northeast El Paso is part of the city of El Paso, Texas and is located north of Central El Paso, and east of the Franklin Mountains.

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Northeast India

Northeast India (officially North Eastern Region, NER) is the easternmost region of India representing both a geographic and political administrative division of the country.

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Northern California Indian Development Council

The Northern California Indian Development Council, Inc. is a private nonprofit corporation that annually provides services to 14,000 to 15,000 clients statewide.

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Northern Cape

The Northern Cape (Noord-Kaap; Kapa Bokone) is the largest and most sparsely populated province of South Africa.

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Northern Mariana Islands

The Northern Mariana Islands, officially the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI; Sankattan Siha Na Islas Mariånas; Refaluwasch or Carolinian: Commonwealth Téél Falúw kka Efáng llól Marianas), is an insular area and commonwealth of the United States consisting of 15 islands in the northwestern Pacific Ocean.

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Norton, Buckland and Stone

Norton, Buckland and Stone is a small rural civil parish east of Teynham and west of the centre of Faversham in the borough of Swale, Kent, England.

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Norway

Norway (Norwegian: (Bokmål) or (Nynorsk); Norga), officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a unitary sovereign state whose territory comprises the western portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula plus the remote island of Jan Mayen and the archipelago of Svalbard.

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Norwegian Archaeological Review

Norwegian Archaeological Review is a peer-reviewed academic journal of archaeology.

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Norwegian National Academy of Craft and Art Industry

The Norwegian National Academy of Craft and Art Industry (Statens håndverks- og kunstindustriskole) was established in 1818.

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Norwegian University of Science and Technology

The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, abbreviated NTNU) is a public research university with campuses in the cities of Trondheim, Gjøvik, and Ålesund in Norway, and has become the largest university in Norway, following the university merger in 2016.

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Novgorod Slavs

The Novgorod Slavs or Ilmen Slavs (Ильменские словене, Il'menskiye slovene) were the northernmost tribe of the Early East Slavs, which inhabited the shores of Lake Ilmen and the basin of the rivers of Volkhov, Lovat, Msta, and the upper stream of the Mologa River in the 8th to 10th centuries.

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Nußbach, Rhineland-Palatinate

Nußbach (or Nussbach) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Nußbaum

Nußbaum (or Nussbaum) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Nubiology

Nubiology is the designation given to the primarily archaeological science that specialises in the scientific study of Ancient Nubia and its antiquities.

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Nuclear physics

Nuclear physics is the field of physics that studies atomic nuclei and their constituents and interactions.

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Number of Identified Specimens

The Number of Identified Specimens or Number of Individual Specimens (NISP), is used in archaeology and paleontology when counting bones from a site.

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Numeira

Numeira is an archaeological site in Jordan near the southern Dead Sea.

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Nunavut

Nunavut (Inuktitut syllabics ᓄᓇᕗᑦ) is the newest, largest, and northernmost territory of Canada.

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Nurettin Yardımcı

Nurettin Yardımcı (March 5, 1944 in Şanlıurfa) is a Turkish archaeologist and high-ranked bureaucrat who has served in the Ministry of Culture of Turkey and under the Prime Minister of Turkey.

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Nurida Gadirova Ateshi

Nourida Gadirova Ateshi (22 August 1965 in Oğuz, in the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic (Azerbaijan SSR)) is an Azerbaijani author and scientist who specialises in the archaeology and prehistory of the Caucasus.

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Nursling

Nursling is a village in Hampshire, England, situated in the parish of Nursling and Rownhams, about 6 kilometres north-west of the city of Southampton.

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Nwetwe Pan

The Nwetwe Pan is a large salt pan within the Makgadikgadi region of Botswana.

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Nyenschantz

Nyenschantz (Ниенша́нц, Nienshants; Nyenskans; Nevanlinna) was a Swedish fortress at the confluence of the Neva River and Okhta River, the site of present-day Saint Petersburg, Russia.

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O'ahu petrel

The Oahu petrel (Pterodroma jugabilis) is an extinct species of very small gadfly petrel known only from subfossil material found in the Hawaiian Islands.

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O. G. S. Crawford

Osbert Guy Stanhope Crawford (28 October 1886 – 28 November 1957), better known as O. G. S. Crawford, was a British archaeologist who specialised in the study of prehistoric Britain and the archaeology of Sudan.

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Oakmere hill fort

Oakmere hill fort is an Iron Age hill fort, one of many large fortified settlements constructed across Britain during the Iron Age, but one of only seven in the county of Cheshire in northern England.

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Oakville, Alabama

Oakville is an unincorporated community located in the southeast corner of Lawrence County, Alabama, United States.

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Oba-Igbomina

Oba-Igbomina (in Yoruba correctly Ọ̀bà, but also written as Òbà), is an ancient Igbomina town in northeastern Isin Local Government Area of Kwara State.

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Obalumo

The Obalúmo is a royal personage, a traditional monarch amongst the Igbomina clan of the Yorubas of West Africa.

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Ober Kostenz

Ober Kostenz is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ober-Laudenbach

Ober-Laudenbach is a municipality of the town of Heppenheim in the state of Hesse, Germany.

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Oberalben

Oberalben is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Oberhausen bei Kirn

Oberhausen bei Kirn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Oberstaufenbach

Oberstaufenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Oberweiler im Tal

Oberweiler im Tal is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Oberweiler-Tiefenbach

Oberweiler-Tiefenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Obin

Obin, real name Josephine Komara, is a textile designer from Indonesia.

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Object conservation

Object conservation involves the preservation of three-dimensional works of art.

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Objet d'art

Objet d'art (plural objets d'art) means literally "art object", or work of art, in French, but in practice the term has long been reserved in English to describe works of art that are not paintings, large or medium-sized sculptures, prints or drawings.

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Obsidian

Obsidian is a naturally occurring volcanic glass formed as an extrusive igneous rock.

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Obsidian hydration dating

Obsidian hydration dating (OHD) is a geochemical method of determining age in either absolute or relative terms of an artifact made of obsidian.

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Obsidian use in Mesoamerica

Obsidian is a naturally formed volcanic glass that was an important part of the material culture of Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

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Occaneechi

The Occaneechi (also Occoneechee and Akenatzy) are Native Americans who lived primarily on a large, long Occoneechee Island and east of the confluence of the Dan and Roanoke Rivers, near current day Clarksville, Virginia in the 17th century.

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Oceania

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

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Ocmulgee National Monument

Ocmulgee National Monument preserves traces of over ten millennia of Southeastern Native American culture, including major earthworks built before 1000 CE by the South Appalachian Mississippian culture (a regional variation of the Mississippian culture.) These include the Great Temple and other ceremonial mounds, a burial mound, and defensive trenches.

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Ocoa Valley

The Ocoa Valley is a landform in central Chile located by the La Campana National Park.

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October 1917

The following events occurred in October 1917.

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Odanak

Odanak is an Abenaki First Nations reserve in the Centre-du-Québec region, Quebec, Canada.

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Odawa

The Odawa (also Ottawa or Odaawaa), said to mean "traders", are an Indigenous American ethnic group who primarily inhabit land in the northern United States and southern Canada.

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Oded Golan

Oded Golan (עודד גולן) (born 1951 in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli engineer, entrepreneur, and antiquities collector.

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Odenbach

Odenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Odeon of Lyon

The Odeon of Lyon (Odéon antique de Lyon) is a small ancient Roman theatre near the summit of the Fourvière hill in Lyon, France.

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Odernheim am Glan

Odernheim am Glan is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Odin from Lejre

Odin from Lejre is a small cast silver figurine from approximately 900 C.E., depicting an individual on a throne wearing a floor-length dress, an apron, four bead necklaces, a neck ring, a cloak and a rim-less hat.

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Odisha State Museum

Odisha State Museum is a museum in Bhubaneswar, Odisha.

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Odysseus Acanthoplex

Odysseus Acanthoplex (Ὀδυσσεὺς ἀκανθοπλήξ, Odysseus Akanthoplēx, "Odysseus wounded by a spine"; also known as Odysseus Wounded, Odysseus Spine-struck and Odysseus Wounded by the Spine) is a lost play by the Athenian dramatist Sophocles.

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Oella, Maryland

Oella is a small, historic mill town on the Patapsco River in western Baltimore County, Maryland, located between Catonsville and Ellicott City.

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Ofelia Giudicissi Curci

Ofelia Giudicissi Curci (1934–1981) was an Italian poet, and archeologist.

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Ofer Bar-Yosef

Ofer Bar-Yosef (born 1937) is an Israeli archaeologist and anthropologist whose main field of study is the Palaeolithic period.

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Off Beat (comics)

Off*beat is an original English-language manga authored by Jennifer Lee Quick, first released September 13, 2005.

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Offa's Dyke

Offa's Dyke (Clawdd Offa) is a large linear earthwork that roughly follows the current border between England and Wales.

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Offenbach-Hundheim

Offenbach-Hundheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Office of Ocean Exploration

In the United States the Office of Ocean Exploration (OE) (now Office of Ocean Exploration and Research) is a division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) run under the auspices of the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR).

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Ofu-Olosega

Ofu and Olosega are parts of a volcanic doublet in the Manu‘a Group of the Samoan Islands—part of American Samoa.

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Ogan Komering Ulu Regency

Ogan Komering Ulu Regency is a regency of South Sumatra, Indonesia.

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Ogdensburg, New York

Ogdensburg is a city in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States.

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OH 5

OH 5 (Olduvai Hominid number 5, also known as Zinjanthropus or "Nutcracker Man"; colloquially as "Dear Boy") is a fossilized cranium and the holotype of the species Paranthropus boisei.

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Ohio History Connection

Ohio History Connection is a non-profit organization incorporated in 1885 as The Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society "to promote a knowledge of archaeology and history, especially in Ohio".

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Oil spill

An oil spill is the release of a liquid petroleum hydrocarbon into the environment, especially the marine ecosystem, due to human activity, and is a form of pollution.

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Ojo Guareña

Ojo Guareña is a karst complex located in the Cantabrian Mountains of Castile and Leon, Spain, declared a natural monument by the government of Castile and Leon in 1996.

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Oketeyeconne, Georgia

Oketeyeconne was an unincorporated community in Clay County, Georgia, United States, which was located along the Chattahoochee River.

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Olaf H. Olsen

Olaf Heymann Olsen (7 June 1928 – 17 November 2015) was a Danish historian and archaeologist.

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Old Earth creationism

Old Earth creationism is a form of creationism which includes gap creationism, progressive creationism, and evolutionary creationism.

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Old Europe (archaeology)

Old Europe is a term coined by archaeologist Marija Gimbutas to describe what she perceived as a relatively homogeneous pre-Indo-European Neolithic culture in southeastern Europe located in the Danube River valley, also known as Danubian culture.

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Old Fort Ruin

Old Fort Ruin is an archaeological site located in Rio Arriba County, northwestern New Mexico, United States, on lands owned by the State of New Mexico.

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Old Norse religion

Old Norse religion developed from early Germanic religion during the Proto-Norse period, when the North Germanic people separated into a distinct branch of the Germanic peoples.

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Old Sarum

Old Sarum is the site of the earliest settlement of Salisbury in England.

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Old Trail Town

Old Trail Town is a collection of historic western buildings and artifacts, dating from 1879–1901, located off the Yellowstone Highway in the resort city of Cody, the seat of Park County in northwestern Wyoming.

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Old wood

The old wood effect or old wood problem is a pitfall encountered in the archaeological technique of radiocarbon dating.

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Old World

The term "Old World" is used in the West to refer to Africa, Asia and Europe (Afro-Eurasia or the World Island), regarded collectively as the part of the world known to its population before contact with the Americas and Oceania (the "New World").

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Older Parthenon

The Older Parthenon or Pre‐Parthenon, as it is frequently referred to, constitutes the first endeavour to build a sanctuary for Athena Parthenos on the site of the present Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens.

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Oldisleben I

Oldisleben I is an archeological site of the Eemian interglacial period located north of Weimar in the Oldisleben municipality, Germany.

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Oldmeldrum

Oldmeldrum (commonly known as Meldrum) is a village and parish in the Formartine area of Aberdeenshire, not far from Inverurie in North East Scotland.

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Oleg Grabar

Oleg Grabar (November 3, 1929 – January 8, 2011) was a French-born art historian and archeologist, who spent most of his career in the United States, as a leading figure in the field of Islamic art and architecture.

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Oleh Olzhych

Oleh Olzhych (July 8, 1907, Zhytomyr - 9 June 1944, Sachsenhausen concentration camp, Germany) was a Ukrainian poet and nationalist leader.

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Olexandr Kolchenko

Olexandr Olexandrovych Kolchenko (Олександр Олександрович Кольченко, Александр Александрович Кольченко, nicknamed "Tundra", born November 26, 1989) is a Ukrainian left-wing and trade union activist, antifascist, anarchist, ecologist, archaeologist, who has been convicted of terrorism by the Russian occupation administration of Crimea in 2014.

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Olga Gorodetskaya

Olga Gorodetskaya, also known as Kuo Ching-yun, is a Taiwan (Republic of China) based historian, known mostly for her research into early Chinese history and archaeology.

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Olga Tufnell

Olga Tufnell (26 January 1905 – 11 April 1985) was a British archaeologist who assisted on the excavation of the ancient city of Lachish in the 1930s.

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Olivier Aurenche

Olivier Aurenche is a French archaeologist working in the prehistory of the Levant and Near East.

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Olivier Rayet

Olivier Rayet (23 September 1847, Le Cairou – 19 February 1887, Paris) was a French archaeologist.

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Olivier Sitruk

Olivier Sitruk (born December 25, 1970 in Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France), is a French comedian, actor, and producer, who has appeared in 44 films and television shows.

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Oliwa

Oliwa, also Oliva, is one of the quarters of Gdańsk, Poland.

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Olmeto

Olmeto is a commune in the Corse-du-Sud department of France on the island of Corsica.

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Olomouc

Olomouc (locally Holomóc or Olomóc; Olmütz; Latin: Olomucium or Iuliomontium; Ołomuniec; Alamóc) is a city in Moravia, in the east of the Czech Republic.

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Olorgesailie

Olorgesailie is a geological formation in East Africa containing a group of Lower Paleolithic archaeological sites.

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Olous

Olous or Olus (Ancient Greek: Ὄλους, or Ὄλουλις) is an ancient, sunken city situated at the present day town of Elounda, Crete, Greece.

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Olpe, Germany

Olpe is a town situated in the foothills of the Ebbegebirge in North Rhine-Westphalia, roughly 60 km east of Cologne and 20 km northwest of Siegen.

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Olsen-Chubbuck Bison Kill Site

The Olsen-Chubbuck Bison kill site is located southeast of Kit Carson, Colorado.

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Oluf Rygh

Oluf Rygh (5 September 1833 – 19 August 1899) was a noted Norwegian archaeologist, philologist and historian.

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Omaha people

The Omaha are a federally recognized Midwestern Native American tribe who reside on the Omaha Reservation in northeastern Nebraska and western Iowa, United States.

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Ometepe

Ometepe is an island formed by two volcanoes rising out of Lake Nicaragua in the Republic of Nicaragua.

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Omi-Osun ruins

The Omi-Ọsun ruins are the remains of an ancient settlement of the Oke-Ila Orangun kingdom, located along the Omi-Ọsun river in southwestern Nigeria.

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One Thousand and One Nights

One Thousand and One Nights (ʾAlf layla wa-layla) is a collection of Middle Eastern folk tales compiled in Arabic during the Islamic Golden Age.

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Oneota

Oneota is a designation archaeologists use to refer to a cultural complex that existed in the eastern plains and Great Lakes area of what is now the United States from around AD 900 to around 1650 or 1700.

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Opone

Opone (Οπώνη) was an ancient Somali city situated in the Horn of Africa.

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Oppertshausen

Oppertshausen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Opus quadratum

Opus quadratum is an ancient Roman construction technique, in which squared blocks of stone of the same height were set in parallel courses, most often without the use of mortar.

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Oral history

Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews.

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Orcadians

Orcadians are the people who live in or come from the Orkney islands of Scotland.

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Orce

Orce is a municipality located in the province of Granada, in southeastern Spain.

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Order of Ouissam Alaouite

The Order of Ouissam Alaouite or the Sharifian Order of Al-Alaoui is a military decoration of Morocco which is bestowed by the King of Morocco upon those civilians and military officers who have displayed heroism in combat or have contributed meritorious service to the Moroccan state.

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Ordu Ethnographical Museum

Ordu Ethnographical Museum (Ordu Etnoğrafya Müzesi) is a museum in Ordu, Turkey.

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Ordu-Baliq

Ordu-Baliqalso spelled Ordu Balykh, Ordu Balik, Ordu-Balïq, Ordu Balig, Ordu Baligh (meaning "city of the court", "city of the army"), also known as Mubalik and Karabalghasun, was the capital of the first Uyghur Khaganate.

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Oregon Caves National Monument and Preserve

Oregon Caves National Monument and Preserve is a protected area in the northern Siskiyou Mountains of southwestern Oregon in the United States.

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Orensberg

The Orensberg, also known in the region as the Orensfels(en) due to the striking rock formations on its summit plateau, is a hill,, near Frankweiler in the county of Südliche Weinstraße in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

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Oriental Magic

Oriental Magic, by Idries Shah, is a study of magical practices in diverse cultures from Europe and Africa, through Asia to the Far East.

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Oriental studies

Oriental studies is the academic field of study that embraces Near Eastern and Far Eastern societies and cultures, languages, peoples, history and archaeology; in recent years the subject has often been turned into the newer terms of Asian studies and Middle Eastern studies.

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Origin of language

The evolutionary emergence of language in the human species has been a subject of speculation for several centuries.

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Origins of Hutu, Tutsi and Twa

The origins of the Tutsi and Hutu people is a major issue in the histories of Rwanda and Burundi, as well as the Great Lakes region of Africa.

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Origins of the blues

Little is known about the exact origin of the music now known as the blues.

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Origins of the Sri Lankan civil war

The origins of the Sri Lankan Civil War lie in the continuous political rancor between the majority Sinhalese and the minority Sri Lankan Tamils.

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Orillia

Orillia is a city in Ontario, Canada.

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Orion correlation theory

The Orion correlation theory (or Giza-Orion correlation theory) is a hypothesis in alternative Egyptology.

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Orkney

Orkney (Orkneyjar), also known as the Orkney Islands, is an archipelago in the Northern Isles of Scotland, situated off the north coast of Great Britain.

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Orkney Antiquarian Society

The Orkney Antiquarian Society was founded in 1922 by Dr.

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Orkney College

Orkney College is a further and higher education college in Orkney, an archipelago in northern Scotland.

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Ormskirk

Ormskirk is a market town in West Lancashire, England, north of Liverpool, northwest of St Helens, southeast of Southport and southwest of Preston.

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Ornament (art)

In architecture and decorative art, ornament is a decoration used to embellish parts of a building or object.

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Oronsay, Inner Hebrides

Oronsay (Scottish Gaelic: Orasaigh), also sometimes spelt and pronounced Oransay by the local community, is a small tidal island south of Colonsay in the Scottish Inner Hebrides with an area of.

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Orsoy, Germany

Orsoy is a district of the Lower Rhine town of Rheinberg on the Rhine.

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Orville Adalbert Derby

Orville Adalbert Derby (July 23, 1851 – November 27, 1915) was an American geologist who worked in Brazil.

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Osaka Gakuin University

Osaka Gakuin University (大阪学院大学, Ōsaka Gakuin Daigaku), also known as Osaka Graduate University (OGU), is a mid-sized, mid-level private liberal arts university located in Suita, Osaka Prefecture, Japan.

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Oscar Almgren

Oscar Almgren (9 November 1869 – 13 May 1945) was a Swedish archaeologist specializing in prehistoric archaeology.

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Oscar Broneer

Oscar Theodore Broneer (December 28, 1894 – February 22, 1992) was a prominent Swedish American educator and archaeologist known in particular for his work on Ancient Greece.

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Oscar Montelius

Gustav Oscar August Montelius, known as Oscar Montelius (9September 18434November 1921) was a Swedish archaeologist who refined the concept of seriation, a relative chronological dating method.

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Oscar White Muscarella

Oscar White Muscarella (b. 1931) is an American archaeologist and former research fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where he worked for over 40 years before retiring in 2009.

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Osceola

Osceola (1804 – January 30, 1838), born as Billy Powell, became an influential leader of the Seminole in Florida.

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Osijek

Osijek is the fourth largest city in Croatia with a population of 108,048 in 2011.

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Osirica

The Osirica is purported Black Egyptian masonic order.

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Osman Hamdi Bey

Osman Hamdi Bey (30 December 184224 February 1910) was an Ottoman administrator, intellectual, art expert and also a prominent and pioneering painter.

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Ossa cave

Ossa cave describes a cave at Mount Ossa in Greece.

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Osteology

Osteology is the scientific study of bones, practiced by osteologists.

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Osteometry

Osteometry is the study and measurement of human or animal skeleton, especially in an anthropological or archaeological context.

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Osthofen

Osthofen is a town in the middle of the Wonnegau in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ostia Antica

Ostia Antica is a large archaeological site, close to the modern town of Ostia, that is the location of the harbour city of ancient Rome, 15 miles (25 kilometres) southwest of Rome.

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Ostracon

An ostracon (Greek: ὄστρακον ostrakon, plural ὄστρακα ostraka) is a piece of pottery, usually broken off from a vase or other earthenware vessel.

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Ostrów Lednicki

Ostrów Lednicki is an island in the southern portion of Lake Lednica in Poland, located between the cities of Gniezno and Poznań.

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Ostrea

Ostrea is a genus of edible oysters, marine bivalve mollusks in the family Ostreidae, the oysters.

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Ostrea lurida

Ostrea lurida, common name the Olympia oyster, after Olympia, Washington in the Puget Sound area, is a species of edible oyster, a marine bivalve mollusk in the family Ostreidae.

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Otala

Otala is a genus of land snails in the family Helicidae.

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Otala lactea

Otala lactea, common names, the milk snail, or Spanish snail, is a large, edible species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Helicidae the typical snails.

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Otfried Deubner

Otfried Deubner (* 19 December 1908 in Königsberg, Germany,† March 16, 2001) was a German classical archaeologist and diplomat.

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Othon Riemann

Othon Riemann (13 June 1853, in Nancy – 16 August 1891, in Interlaken) was a French classical philologist and archaeologist.

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Ottó Herman Museum

The Ottó Herman Museum is the largest museum of Miskolc, Hungary.

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Otte Wallish

Otte Wallish (1903–1977) (אוטה וליש) was a Czech emigre to Israel who established himself as a graphic designer and contributed to the symbolic self-representation of the Jewish state.

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Otto Benesch

Otto Benesch (June 29, 1896 – November 16, 1964) was an Austrian art historian.

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Otto Benndorf

Otto Benndorf (13 September 1838 – 2 January 1907) was a German-Austrian archaeologist who was a native of Greiz.

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Otto Brendel

Otto Johannes Brendel (October 10, 1901 in Erlangen, Germany – October 8, 1973 in New York City) was a German art historian and scholar of Etruscan art and archaeology.

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Otto Hirschfeld

Otto Hirschfeld (March 16, 1843 – March 27, 1922) was a German epigraphist and professor of ancient history who was a native of Königsberg.

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Otto Jahn

Otto Jahn (16 June 1813 in Kiel – 9 September 1869 in Göttingen), was a German archaeologist, philologist, and writer on art and music.

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Otto Kern

Otto Kern (14 February 1863 in Schulpforte (now part of Bad Kösen) – 31 January 1942 in Halle an der Saale) was a German philologist, archaeologist and epigraphist.

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Otto Magnus von Stackelberg (archaeologist)

Count Otto Magnus Baron von Stackelberg (25 July 1786 – 27 March 1837) was a Baltic German, Imperial Russian archaeologist, as well as a writer, painter and art historian.

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Otto Puchstein

Otto Puchstein (6 July 1856, Labes – 9 March 1911, Berlin) was a German classical archaeologist.

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Otto Seeck

Otto Karl Seeck (2 February 1850 – 29 June 1921) was a German classical historian who is perhaps best known for his work on the decline of the ancient world.

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Otto W. Geist

Otto William Geist (December 27, 1888 – 1963), aka Aghvook, was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska for much of his adult life.

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Otto Walter

Otto Walter (1882, in Vienna – 1965, in Parsch in the state of Salzburg) was an Austrian archaeologist.

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Outline of anthropology

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to anthropology: Anthropology – study of humanity.

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Outline of archaeology

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to archaeology: Archaeology – study of human cultures through the recovery, documentation, and analysis of material remains and environmental data, including architecture, artifacts, biofacts, human remains, and landscapes.

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Outline of forensic science

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to forensic science: Forensic science – application of a broad spectrum of sciences to answer questions of interest to a legal system.

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Outline of geology

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to geology: Geology – one of the Earth sciences – is the study of the Earth, with the general exclusion of present-day life, flow within the ocean, and the atmosphere.

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Outline of history

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to history: History – discovery, collection, organization, and presentation of information about past events.

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Outline of Nigeria

Federal Republic of Nigeria – sovereign country located in West Africa.

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Outline of science

The following outline is provided as a topical overview of science: Science – the systematic effort of acquiring knowledge—through observation and experimentation coupled with logic and reasoning to find out what can be proved or not proved—and the knowledge thus acquired.

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Outline of social science

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to social science: Social science – branch of science concerned with society and human behaviors.

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Outline of the humanities

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the humanities: Humanities – academic disciplines that study the human condition, using methods that are primarily analytical, critical, or speculative, as distinguished from the mainly empirical approaches of the natural sciences.

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Ovayok Territorial Park

Ovayok Territorial Park (sometimes Uvajuq, formerly Mount Pelly) is a park situated east of Cambridge Bay, Kitikmeot, Nunavut, Canada.

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Overburden

In mining, overburden (also called waste or spoil) is the material that lies above an area that lends itself to economical exploitation, such as the rock, soil, and ecosystem that lies above a coal seam or ore body.

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Overhill Cherokee

Overhill Cherokee was the term for the Cherokee people located in their historic settlements in what is now the U.S. state of Tennessee in the Southeastern United States, on the west side of the Appalachian Mountains.

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Overstegen

Overstegen is a district in the north-east of Doetinchem, the biggest city within the Gelderse Achterhoek.

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Overton Period

The Overton Period is the name given by archaeologists to a division of prehistory in Britain covering the period between 2000 BC and 1650 BC.

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Ovid R. Sellers

Ovid Rogers Sellers (August 12, 1884 – July 7, 1975) was an internationally known Old Testament scholar and archaeologist who played a role in the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls.

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Oxford Archaeology

Oxford Archaeology (OA, trading name of Oxford Archaeology Limited) is one of the largest and longest-established independent archaeology and heritage practices in Europe, operating from three permanent offices in Oxford, Lancaster and Cambridge, and working across the UK.

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Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology

The Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology (OCMA) is a specialist research group within the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford in England.

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Oxford Companions

Oxford Companions is a book series published by Oxford University Press, providing general knowledge within a specific area.

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Oxford Journal of Archaeology

The Oxford Journal of Archaeology is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by John Wiley & Sons on behalf of the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford.

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Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society

The Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society (OAHS) has existed in one form or another since at least 1839, although with its current name only since 1972.

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Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board

The Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board, established in 1999, is administered by the Oxford Civic Society.

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Oxidizable carbon ratio dating

Oxidizable carbon ratio dating is a method of dating in archaeology and earth science that can be used to derive or estimate the age of soil and sediment samples up to 35,000 years old.

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Ozleworth

Ozleworth is a village and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England, approximately south of Gloucester.

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P-51 Dragon Fighter

P-51 Dragon Fighter is a 2014 science fiction fantasy action film written and directed by Mark Atkins.

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P. G. Wodehouse locations

The following is an incomplete compendium of the fictional locations featured in the stories of P. G. Wodehouse, in alphabetical order by place name.

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P. G. Wodehouse minor characters

The following is an incomplete compendium of the fictional characters featured in the stories of P. G. Wodehouse (other than the ones already described in separate guides about Wodehouse series such as Blandings, Jeeves, etc.), in alphabetical order by surname.

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P. V. Parabrahma Sastry

P.V. Parabrahma Sastry (1920–2016) was an archeologist, historian, epigraphist and numismatist who held the rank of a Deputy Director in the Archaeology Department of United Andhra Pradesh Government.

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Pabna

Pabna (পাবনা) is a city of Pabna District, Rajshahi Division, Bangladesh and the administrative capital of eponymous Pabna District.

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Pabna District

Pabna District (পাবনা জেলা Pabna Zila) is a district in north-central Bangladesh.

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Pachacamac

Pachacamac (Pachakamaq) is an archaeological site southeast of Lima, Peru in the Valley of the Lurín River.

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Pacific studies

Pacific studies is the study of the Pacific region (Oceania) across academic disciplines such as anthropology, archeology, art, economics, geography, history, linguistics, literature, music, politics, or sociology.

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Packaging and labeling

Packaging is the science, art and technology of enclosing or protecting products for distribution, storage, sale, and use.

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Paddaghju

Paddaghju is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Pagan studies

Pagan studies is the multidisciplinary academic field devoted to the study of contemporary Paganism, a broad assortment of modern religious movements, which are typically influenced by or claiming to be derived from the various pagan beliefs of premodern Europe.

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Paganism

Paganism is a term first used in the fourth century by early Christians for populations of the Roman Empire who practiced polytheism, either because they were increasingly rural and provincial relative to the Christian population or because they were not milites Christi (soldiers of Christ).

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Page-Ladson prehistory site

The Page-Ladson prehistory site (8JE591) is a deep sinkhole in the bed of the karstic Aucilla River (between Jefferson and Taylor counties in the Big Bend region of Florida) that has stratified deposits of late Pleistocene and early Holocene animal bones and human artifacts.

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Paglicci Cave

Paglicci Cave is an archaeological site situated in Paglicci, near Rignano Garganico, Apulia, southern Italy.

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Pahor Labib

Pahor Labib (Arabic: باهور لبيب Bahur Labib; born 19 September 1905 at Ain Shams, Cairo; died 7 May 1994) was Director of the Coptic Museum, Cairo, Egypt, from 1951 to 1965 and one of the world leaders in Egyptology and Coptology.

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Paisley Caves

The Paisley Caves complex is a system of four caves in an arid, desolate region of south-central Oregon, United States north of the present-day city of Paisley, Oregon.

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Paisley Museum and Art Galleries

Paisley Museum and Art Galleries is a museum and public art gallery located in the town of Paisley and is run by Renfrewshire Council.

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Pakistani architecture

Pakistani architecture refers to the various structures built during different time periods in what is now Pakistan.

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Palace of Omurtag

The Palace of Omurtag or Aul (Aulē) of Omurtag (Аул на Омуртаг, Aul na Omurtag) is an archaeological site in northeastern Bulgaria dating to Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages located near the village of Han Krum in Shumen Province.

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Palace Site

The Palace Site is a ca.

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Palacio de Buenavista

Buenavista Palace (El Palacio de Buenavista or El Palacio de los Condes de Buenavista, "the palace of the counts of Buenavista") is a historical edifice in Málaga, Andalusia, Spain.

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Palaeoarchaeology

Palaeoarchaeology (or paleoarcheology) is the archaeology of deep time.

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Palaeochannel

A palaeochannel, or paleochannel, is a remnant of an inactive river or stream channel that has been filled or buried by younger sediment.

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Palais Lanckoroński

The Palais Lanckoroński was a palace in Vienna, Austria, located at Jacquingasse 16-18, in the Landstraße District.

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Palala River

The Palala or Lephalala River, also called the ''Rhooebok-river'' by Thomas Baines, is a river in South Africa.

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Palatine Chapel, Aachen

The Palatine Chapel in Aachen is an early medieval chapel and remaining component of Charlemagne's Palace of Aachen in what is now Germany.

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Palatine Hill

The Palatine Hill (Collis Palatium or Mons Palatinus; Palatino) is the centremost of the Seven Hills of Rome and is one of the most ancient parts of the city.

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Palatki Heritage Site

The Palatki Heritage Site is an archaeological site and park located in the Coconino National Forest, near Sedona, in Arizona, United States.

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Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana

The Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana, also known as the Palazzo della Civiltà del Lavoro or simply the Colosseo Quadrato (Square Colosseum), is an icon of New Classical architecture and Fascist architecture.

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Palazzo Farnese

Palazzo Farnese or Farnese Palace is one of the most important High Renaissance palaces in Rome.

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Palazzo Malta

Palazzo Malta, officially named as the Magistral Palace (Palazzo Magistrale), and also known as Palazzo di Malta or Palazzo dell'Ordine di Malta, is the most important of the two headquarters of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (the other being Villa Malta), a Roman Catholic lay religious order and a sovereign subject of international law.

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Paleo-Arctic Tradition

The Paleo-Arctic Tradition is the name given by archaeologists to the cultural tradition of the earliest well-documented human occupants of the North American Arctic, which date from the period 8000–5000 BC.

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Paleo-Balkan languages

The Paleo-Balkan languages are the various extinct Indo-European languages that were spoken in the Balkans in ancient times.

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Paleo-Indians

Paleo-Indians, Paleoindians or Paleoamericans is a classification term given to the first peoples who entered, and subsequently inhabited, the Americas during the final glacial episodes of the late Pleistocene period.

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Paleoanthropology

Paleoanthropology or paleo-anthropology is a branch of archaeology with a human focus, which seeks to understand the early development of anatomically modern humans, a process known as hominization, through the reconstruction of evolutionary kinship lines within the family Hominidae, working from biological evidence (such as petrified skeletal remains, bone fragments, footprints) and cultural evidence (such as stone tools, artifacts, and settlement localities).

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Paleobiology

Paleobiology (UK & Canadian English: palaeobiology) is a growing and comparatively new discipline which combines the methods and findings of the natural science biology with the methods and findings of the earth science paleontology.

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Paleobotany

Paleobotany, also spelled as palaeobotany (from the Greek words paleon.

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Paleoethnobotany

Pal(a)eoethnobotany or Archaeobotany, "is the study of remains of plants cultivated or used by people in ancient times, which have survived in archaeological contexts." Paleoethnobotany is the archaeological sub-field that studies plant remains from archaeological sites.

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Paleofeces

Paleofeces (UK: Palaeofaeces) are ancient human feces, often found as part of archaeological excavations or surveys.

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Paleolithic

The Paleolithic or Palaeolithic is a period in human prehistory distinguished by the original development of stone tools that covers c. 95% of human technological prehistory.

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Paleoneurobiology

Paleoneurobiology is the study of brain evolution by analysis of brain endocasts to determine endocranial traits and volumes.

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Paleontological and Archaeological Museum Walter Ilha

The Paleontological and Archaeological Museum "Walter Ilha" is a Brazilian museum located in São Pedro do Sul, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul.

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Paleontology

Paleontology or palaeontology is the scientific study of life that existed prior to, and sometimes including, the start of the Holocene Epoch (roughly 11,700 years before present).

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Paleontology in Montana

Paleontology in Montana refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of Montana.

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Paleontology in Nebraska

The location of the state of Nebraska Paleontology in Nebraska refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of Nebraska.

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Paleontology in New Jersey

The location of the state of New Jersey Paleontology in New Jersey refers to paleontological research in the US state of New Jersey.

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Paleontology in South Dakota

Paleontology in South Dakota refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of South Dakota.

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Paleontology in Texas

Paleontology in Texas refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of Texas.

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Paleozoology

Palaeozoology, also spelled as Paleozoology (Greek: παλαιόν, palaeon "old" and ζῷον, zoon "animal"), is the branch of paleontology, paleobiology, or zoology dealing with the recovery and identification of multicellular animal remains from geological (or even archeological) contexts, and the use of these fossils in the reconstruction of prehistoric environments and ancient ecosystems.

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Palestinian costumes

Palestinian costumes are the traditional clothing worn by Palestinians.

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Pali-Aike volcanic field

Pali-Aike volcanic field is a volcanic field in Argentina which straddles the border with Chile.

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Palimpsest

In textual studies, a palimpsest is a manuscript page, either from a scroll or a book, from which the text has been scraped or washed off so that the page can be reused for another document.

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Palisade

A palisade—sometimes called a stakewall or a paling—is typically a fence or wall made from wooden stakes or tree trunks and used as a defensive structure or enclosure.

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Palmas, Tocantins

Palmas (Palm trees) is the capital and largest city in the state of Tocantins, Brazil, newly organized under the 1988 constitution.

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Palmi

Palmi (Reggino: Pàrmi, Palmae) is a comune (municipality) of about 19,303 inhabitants in the province of Reggio Calabria in Calabria.

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Palstave

A palstave is a type of early bronze axe.

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Palynology

Palynology is the "study of dust" (from palunō, "strew, sprinkle" and -logy) or "particles that are strewn".

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Pambamarca

Pambamarca (alternate, Pimbamarca) is an eroded stratovolcano in the Central Cordillera of the northern Ecuadorian Andes in Pichincha Province.

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Pamfil Polonic

Pamfil Polonic (27 August 1858 – 17 April 1943) was a Romanian archaeologist and topographer.

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Pamplona Cathedral

The Pamplona Cathedral (Santa María la Real) is a Roman Catholic church in the archdiocese of Pamplona, Spain.

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Pamukkale University

Pamukkale University (PAU), founded in 1992 in Denizli in the Denizli Province of Turkey, has 45,000 students and 1400 academicians.

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Pamunkey

The Pamunkey Indian Tribe is one of 11 Virginia Indian tribes recognized by the Commonwealth of Virginia, and the state's first federally recognized tribe, receiving its status in January 2016.

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Pan-Caribbean

The concept of a "pan-Caribbean" culture area refers to recent proposals by an international group of archaeologists to the effect that contacts among Pre-Columbian peoples of the Yucatán Peninsula, the Antilles, Central America, and northern South America may have been more extensive than heretofore acknowledged.

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Pan-Celticism

Pan-Celticism (Pan-Chelteachas), also known as Celticism or Celtic nationalism is a political, social and cultural movement advocating solidarity and cooperation between Celtic nations (both the Gaelic and Brythonic branches) and the modern Celts in North-Western Europe.

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Panagiotis Faklaris

Panagiotis V. Faklaris (Greek: Παναγιώτης Β. Φάκλαρης) is a Greek archaeologist, professor of classical archaeology and excavator of the acropolis and the walls of Vergina.

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Panagiotis Poulitsas

Panagiotis Poulitsas (Greek: Παναγιώτης Πουλίτσας) was a Greek judge and archeologist.

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Pandora Pann

Pandora Pann is a fictional comic book character owned by DC Comics.

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Paolo Biagi

Paolo Biagi (born 1948) is an Italian archaeologist specialising in the prehistory of Southeast Europe, Russia and the Caucasus, and Southwest Asia.

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Paolo Matthiae

Paolo Matthiae (born 1940) is an Italian archaeologist.

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Papal States under Pope Pius IX

The Papal States under Pope Pius IX assumed a much more modern and secular character than had been seen under previous pontificates, and yet this progressive modernization was not nearly sufficient in resisting the tide of political liberalization and unification in Italy during the middle of the 19th century.

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Papenbroek Collection

The Papenbroek Collection is one of the largest 18th-century Dutch art collections.

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Papyrology

Papyrology is the study of ancient literature, correspondence, legal archives, etc..., as preserved in manuscripts written on papyrus, the most common form of writing material in the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Greece, and Rome.

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Paracas National Reserve

The Paracas National Reserve is located in Ica, Peru and consists of the Paracas Peninsula, coastal areas and tropical desert extending to the south slightly past Punta Caimán, a total of (are marine waters, and are part of the mainland).

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Paradise Cave

Paradise Cave (italic, pronounced 'Yaskeenya Rye') is a horizontal karstic limestone cave located inside the Malik hill, to the south of Kielce, Świętokrzyskie Voivodship, Poland.

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Paradise Valley, Nevada

Paradise Valley is a census-designated place (CDP) in Humboldt County, Nevada, United States, near the Santa Rosa Ranger District of Humboldt National Forest.

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Paradise, Queensland

Paradise was a ghost town on the Burnett River, in Queensland, Australia.

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Paramount chief

A paramount chief is the English-language designation for the highest-level political leader in a regional or local polity or country administered politically with a chief-based system.

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Parc archéologique et botanique de Solutré

The Parc archéologique et botanique de Solutré (13,000 m²) is an archaeological site and botanical garden maintained by the Musée départemental de Préhistoire, Solutré-Pouilly, Saône-et-Loire, Bourgogne, France.

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Parc Cwm long cairn

Parc Cwm long cairn (carn hir Parc Cwm), also known as Parc le Breos burial chamber (siambr gladdu Parc le Breos), is a partly restored Neolithic chambered tomb, identified in 1937 as a Severn-Cotswold type of chambered long barrow.

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Parijnanashram III

Swami Parijnanashram III (Devanagari: परिञानाश्रम्) (June 15, 1947 – August 29, 1991) was the tenth guru of the Chitrapur Saraswat Brahmin community.

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Paris-Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi

Paris-Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi (PSUAD) or Université Paris-Sorbonne Abou Dhabi (UPSAD) is a French and English speaking university in Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates.

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Park of the Caffarella

The Caffarella Park (Parco della Caffarella.) is a large park in Rome, Italy, protected from development.

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Park ranger

A park ranger, park warden, or forest ranger is a person entrusted with protecting and preserving parklands – national, state, provincial, or local parks.

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Parkin Archeological State Park

Parkin Archeological State Park, also known as Parkin Indian Mound, is an archeological site and state park in Parkin, Cross County, Arkansas.

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Parkin, Arkansas

Parkin is a city in Cross County, Arkansas, United States, along the St. Francis River.

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Parque de las Ciencias

Parque de las Ciencias Luis A. Ferré is an educational and recreational park located in Bayamón, Puerto Rico focused on science-related exhibitions.

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Parting Ways (Plymouth, Massachusetts)

Parting Ways was an African-American settlement of freedmen on Route 80 in Plymouth, Massachusetts, near the Plymouth/Kingston town line.

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Parviz Nouri

Parviz Nouri (Persian: پرویز نوری; born May 1, 1938) is an Iranian movie critic, screen writer, and director who has been involved in production of over 20 movies and television shows.

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Parviz Varjavand

Parviz Varjavand (پرویز ورجاوند; 5 January 1934 – 10 June 2007) was a notable Iranian archaeologist, researcher, university professor and politician who was a prominent member of Iran National Front.

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Pasca

Pasca is a town and municipality in the Cundinamarca department of Colombia located in the Andes.

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Pasko Kuzman

Pasko Kuzman (Macedonian: Паско Кузман; born 1947) is a Macedonian archaeologist.

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Past

The past is the set of all events that occurred before a given point in time.

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Pastoral Neolithic

The Pastoral Neolithic refers to a period in Africa's prehistory marking the beginning of food production on the continent following the Later Stone Age.

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Pataliputra capital

The Pataliputra capital is a monumental rectangular capital with volutes and Classical Greek designs, that was discovered in the palace ruins of the ancient Mauryan Empire capital city of Pataliputra (modern Patna, northeastern India).

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Patawomeck

Patawomeck is a Native American tribe based in Stafford County, Virginia, along the Potomac River (Patawomeck is another spelling of Potomac).

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Patina

Patina is a thin layer that variously forms on the surface of copper, bronze and similar metals (tarnish produced by oxidation or other chemical processes), or certain stones, and wooden furniture (sheen produced by age, wear, and polishing), or any similar acquired change of a surface through age and exposure.

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Patriarchy

Patriarchy is a social system in which males hold primary power and predominate in roles of political leadership, moral authority, social privilege and control of property.

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Patricia Vinnicombe

Patricia Vinnicombe (1932–2003) was a South African archaeologist and artist, known for identifying and copying San rock paintings in the valleys and foothills of the Drakensberg.

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Patrick Baert

Patrick Baert (born 23 January 1961 in Brussels) is a Belgian sociologist and social theorist, based in Britain.

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Patrick Edward McGovern

Patrick Edward McGovern (born December 9, 1944) is the Scientific Director of the Biomolecular Archaeology Laboratory for Cuisine, Fermented Beverages, and Health at the University of Pennsylvania Museum in Philadelphia, where he is also an Adjunct Professor of Anthropology.

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Patrick Hunt (archaeologist)

Patrick Hunt (born 1951 in California) is an American archeologist and author.

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Patrick M.M.A. Bringmans

Patrick M.M.A. Bringmans was born 28 November 1970 in Hasselt, Belgium to Albert and Elly Bringmans-Jans.

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Patrickholme bone bead

The Patrickholme bone bead is a square sectioned bone fragment with a perforated hollow through the middle It was found during archaeological excavations in Patrickholme sand quarry in Lanarkshire, Scotland by J. H. Maxwell in 1949.

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Pattanam

Pattanam (പട്ടണം) is a village located in the Periyar delta in Eranakulam district in the southern Indian state of Kerala.

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Patty Jo Watson

Patty Jo Watson (born 1932) is an American archaeologist renowned for her work on Pre-Columbian Native Americans, especially in the Mammoth Cave region of Kentucky.

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Paul Arndt

Paul Julius Arndt (14 October 1865 – 17 July 1937) was a German classical archaeologist born in Dresden.

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Paul Ashbee

Paul Ashbee (23 June 1918 – 19 August 2009) was a leading British archaeologist, noted for his many excavations of barrows, or burial mounds, and for co-directing the Sutton Hoo digs (with Rupert Bruce-Mitford) from 1964 to 1972; he was perhaps less well known as president of the Just William Society, established in 1995 to celebrate the literary oeuvre of Richmal Crompton.

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Paul Atterbury

Paul Rowley Atterbury, FRSA (born 8 April 1945) is a British antiques expert, probably best known for his many appearances since 1979 on the BBC TV programme Antiques Roadshow. He specialises in the art, architecture, design and decorative arts of the 19th and 20th centuries.

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Paul Åström

Paul Åström (January 15, 1929 – October 4, 2008) was a Swedish archaeologist and classical scholar.

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Paul Bahn

Paul G. Bahn is a British archaeologist, translator, writer and broadcaster who has published extensively on a range of archaeological topics, with particular attention to prehistoric art.

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Paul Bovier-Lapierre

Reverend Father Paul Bovier-Lapierre (1873–1950) was a French Jesuit archaeologist, notable for his work on prehistory in Egypt and surveys in southern Lebanon.

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Paul Foucart

Paul-François Foucart (15 March 1836, Paris – 19 May 1926) was a French archaeologist, known for his research involving the Eleusinian Mysteries.

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Paul Freeman (actor)

Paul Freeman (born 18 January 1943) is an English actor.

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Paul Ghalioungui

Paul Ghalioungui or Ghalioungi (1908–1987) (بول غليونجي), MD (Cairo), MRCP (Lond), Professor of Medicine and former Chairman of Internal Medicine department, Ain Shams University Faculty of Medicine.

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Paul Hartwig (archaeologist)

Paul Hartwig (18 February 1859, in Pirna – 3 August 1919, in Gaschwitz, near Leipzig) was a German classical archaeologist, known for his study of Greek vases.

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Paul Hurault, 8th Marquis de Vibraye

Paul Hurault, 8th Marquis de Vibraye (1809–1878) was an amateur archaeologist from France.

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Paul Kosok

Paul August Kosok (21 April 1896 – 1959), an American professor in history and government, is credited with being the first serious researcher of the Nazca Lines in Peru.

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Paul Mellars

Sir Paul Anthony Mellars, FBA (born 29 October 1939) is a British academic, archaeologist and pre-historian.

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Paul Pettitt

Paul Barry Pettitt, FSA is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Paul Rehak

Paul Rehak (March 8, 1954 – June 5, 2004) was an American archaeologist.

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Paul Rivet

Paul Rivet (7 May 1876, Wasigny, Ardennes – 21 March 1958) was a French ethnologist; he founded the Musée de l'Homme in 1937.

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Paul Saintenoy

Paul Saintenoy (19 June 1862 – 18 July 1952) was a Belgian architect, teacher, architectural historian, and writer.

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Paul Sidney Martin

Paul Sidney Martin (born November 22, 1898Nash 2010, p. 105. Nash 2003, p. 165 and the site of the Field Museum of Natural History provide a different date: "Martin was born in Chicago on November 20, 1899" (. Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago. Retrieved 2010-09-18). in Chicago - died January 20, 1974) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Paul Sussman

Paul Nicholas Sussman (11 July 1966 in Beaconsfield – 31 May 2012 in London) was a best-selling English author, archaeologist and journalist.

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Paul Taçon

Paul S.C. Taçon (born 1958) is an anthropologist and archaeologist who has spent over thirty years conducting field work in destinations ranging from Australia, Botswana, Cambodia, Canada, China, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, South Africa and the United States.

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Paul Veyne

Paul Veyne (born 13 June 1930 in Aix-en-Provence) is a French archaeologist and historian, and a specialist on Ancient Rome.

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Paul Vidal de La Blache

Paul Vidal de La Blache (Pézenas, Hérault, 22 January 1845 - Tamaris-sur-Mer, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, 5 April 1918) was a French geographer.

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Paul von Rohden

Paul von Rohden (12 December 1862, Barmen – 28 February 1939, Pieterlen) was a German-Swiss schoolteacher and historian known for his research in the field of prosopography.

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Paul-Émile Botta

Paul-Émile Botta (6 December 1802 – 29 March 1870) was an Italian-born French scientist who served as Consul in Mosul (then in the Ottoman Empire, now in Iraq) from 1842, and who discovered the ruins of the ancient Assyrian capital of Dur-Sharrukin.

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Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala

Dr.

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Paulo Alfeu Junqueira Duarte

Paulo Duarte (November 17, 1899 – March 23, 1984), full name Paulo Alfeu Junqueira Duarte, was a Brazilian archaeologist and humanist.

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Pausanias (geographer)

Pausanias (Παυσανίας Pausanías; c. AD 110 – c. 180) was a Greek traveler and geographer of the second century AD, who lived in the time of Roman emperors Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, and Marcus Aurelius.

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Pavel Dolukhanov

Pavel Dolukhanov (January 1, 1937, Leningrad, USSR – December 6, 2009, Newcastle, UK) was a doctor of Geographical Sciences, Professor, Emeritus Professor (2002), Russian and British paleogeographer and archaeologist at the Institute of History of Material Culture (IHMC), RAS (1959–1989) and the University of Newcastle, United Kingdom (1990–2009), a specialist in archaeology and paleoenvironment of Northern Eurasia.

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Pavilion for Japanese Art

The Pavilion for Japanese Art is a part of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art containing the museum's collection of Japanese works that date from approximately 3000 BC through the 20th century.

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Pawnee people

The Pawnee are a Plains Indian tribe who are headquartered in Pawnee, Oklahoma.

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Pax Romana (reenactment)

Pax Romana is a Classical reenactment society based in the Netherlands, with the main goal to show Romans in the Netherlands as they would have lived in the last quarter of the first century AD.

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Payne & Jones

The Payne & Jones series is a collection of books written by Chris Kuzneski, an American author.

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Payson D. Sheets

Payson D. Sheets is an American archaeologist, Mayanist, and professor of anthropology at the University of Colorado Boulder.

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Pazyryk burials

The Pazyryk (Пазырык) burials are a number of Scythian Iron Age tombs found in the Pazyryk Valley of the Ukok plateau in the Altai Mountains, Siberia, south of the modern city of Novosibirsk, Russia; the site is close to the borders with China, Kazakhstan and Mongolia.

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Père Azaïs

François Bernardin Azaïs, known as Père Azaïs, (31 January 18706 April 1966) was a French missionary and archeologist.

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Péter Zsoldos

Péter Zsoldos (April 20, 1930 – September 26, 1997) was a Hungarian science fiction author who largely wrote about themes common in US/UK science fiction like space travel and robots.

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Předmostí u Přerova (archeology)

Předmostí (Skalka) (often without diacritics as Predmosti or Predmost), situated in the north western part of Přerov, Moravia near the city districts Předmostí of Přerov, is an important Late Pleistocene Cro-Magnon hill site of Central Europe.

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Peanut

The peanut, also known as the groundnut or the goober and taxonomically classified as Arachis hypogaea, is a legume crop grown mainly for its edible seeds.

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Pearce Paul Creasman

Pearce Paul Creasman (born 1981) is an archaeologist in the fields of Egyptology, maritime archaeology, and dendrochronology.

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Peat Moors Centre

The Peat Moors Centre lay on the road between Shapwick and Westhay in Somerset, England.

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Pećka Banja

Pećka Banja (Albanian: Banja e Pejës, Serbian Cyrillic: Пећка Бања) is a township located in the municipality of Istok, Kosovo.

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Pečovnik Mine

Pečovnik Mine is a defunct coal mine near Pečovnik, Slovenia.

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Pecked curvilinear nucleated

Pecked curvilinear nucleated, (PCN) in archaeology, is a form of prehistoric rock carving.

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Pecos conference

The Pecos Conference is an annual conference of archaeologists that is held in the southwestern United States or northern Mexico.

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Pedra Furada

Pedra Furada (meaning pierced rock) is an important collection of over 800 archaeological sites in the state of Piauí, Brazil.

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Pedro Armillas

Pedro Armillas Garcia (9 September 1914 – 11 April 1984) was Spanish academic anthropologist, archaeologist, and an influential pre-Columbian Mesoamerica scholar of the mid-20th century.

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Pedro Borrell

Pedro José Borrell Bentz (born in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic October 6, 1944) is an internationally recognized Dominican architect and archeologist who has earned several awards and is recognized for the transcendence in his architectural designs.

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Pedro Llosas Badía

Pedro Llosas y Badía (Pere Llosas i Badia) (1870–1955) was a Spanish right-wing politician.

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Peel Island

Peel Island (Indigenous: Teerk Ro Ra) is a small heritage-listed island located in Moreton Bay, east of Brisbane, in South East Queensland, Australia.

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Peștera Muierilor

Peștera Muierilor, or Peștera Muierii (Romanian for "The Women's Cave", or "The Woman's Cave"), is an elaborate cave system located in the Baia de Fier commune, Gorj County, Romania.

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Peggy Brunache

Peggy Brunache is a Haitian American food historian and archaeologist.

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Pei Wenzhong

Pei Wenzhong (January 19, 1904 – September 18, 1982), or W. C. Pei, was a Chinese paleontologist, archaeologist and anthropologist born in Fengnan.

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Pejačević Castle in Virovitica

Pejačević Castle in Virovitica is a late-baroque and neoclassicistic castle in the town of Virovitica, Virovitica–Podravina County, northern Croatia.

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Pen Dinas

Pen Dinas is the name of a large hill within the boundary of the village of Penparcau, on the coast of Ceredigion, Wales, (just south of Aberystwyth) upon which an extensive Iron Age, Celtic hillfort of international significance is situated.

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Penang National Park

The Penang National Park (Malay: Taman Negara Pulau Pinang; Tamil: பினாங்கு தேசியப் பூங்காக்கள்,Piṉāṅku tēciyap pūṅkākkaḷ; Chinese: 槟城国家公园,bīng chéng guó jiā gōng yuán) spans 1,213ha of land and sea and is used by scientists, researchers, and nature lovers to explore its natural treasures.

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Penelope Allison

Penelope Allison is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Leicester.

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Penparcau

Penparcau is a village in Ceredigion near to the town of Aberystwyth, Wales, it is situated to the south of Aberystwyth.

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Pensacola, Florida

Pensacola is the westernmost city in the Florida Panhandle, approximately from the border with Alabama, and the county seat of Escambia County, in the U.S. state of Florida.

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Pentacle (magazine)

Pentacle is a Neopagan magazine that began publication in February 2002.

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People of the Black Mountains

People of the Black Mountains is an historical novel by Raymond Williams.

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Pequot

The Pequot are Native American people of the U.S. state of Connecticut.

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Percy Fawcett

Lieutenant Colonel Percy Harrison Fawcett (18 August 1867during or after 1925) was a British geographer, artillery officer, cartographer, archaeologist and explorer of South America.

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Percy Gardner

Percy Gardner, (24 November 1846 – 17 July 1937) was an English classical archaeologist and numismatist.

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Pere Bosch-Gimpera

Pere Bosch-Gimpera (1891 in Barcelona, Catalonia – 1974 in Mexico) was a Spanish-born Mexican archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Pereiaslav-Khmelnytskyi

Pereiaslav-Khmelnytskyi (Перея́слав-Хмельни́цький, translit. Pereyáslav-Khmel′nýts′kyi; also referred to as Pereyaslav-Khmelnytskyy) is an ancient city in the Kiev Oblast (province) of central Ukraine, located on the confluence of Alta and Trubizh rivers some south of the nation's capital Kiev.

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Pereshchepina Treasure

The Pereshchepina Treasure (Перещепинский клад, Съкровище от Мала Перешчепина) is a major deposit of Bulgarian, Sassanian, Sogdian, Turkic and Avarian objects from the period of the Migration Period.

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Performative turn

The performative turn is a paradigmatic shift in the humanities and social sciences that has affected such disciplines as anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, ethnography, history and the relatively young discipline of performance studies.

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Pergamon 2nd Life

Pergamon 2nd Life is a joint art project created by the author, mime artist, and photographer Andrey Alexander from Moscow, Russia, together with the author, circumnavigator, and producer Angelika Gebhard from Bad Wiessee, Germany.

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Periodization

Periodization is the process or study of categorizing the past into discrete, quantified named blocks of timeAdam Rabinowitz.

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Periplus of the Erythraean Sea

The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea or Periplus of the Red Sea (Περίπλους τῆς Ἐρυθράς Θαλάσσης, Periplus Maris Erythraei) is a Greco-Roman periplus, written in Greek, describing navigation and trading opportunities from Roman Egyptian ports like Berenice along the coast of the Red Sea, and others along Northeast Africa and the Sindh and South western India.

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Perscheid

Perscheid is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Persepolis Administrative Archives

The Persepolis Fortification Archive and Persepolis Treasury Archive are two groups of clay administrative archives — sets of records physically stored together – found in Persepolis dating to the Achaemenid Persian Empire.

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Perserschutt

The Perserschutt, a German term meaning "Persian debris", or "Persian rubble", refers to the bulk of architectural and votive sculptures that were damaged by the invading Persian army on the Acropolis of Athens in 480 BC, during the Greco-Persian Wars.

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Persian wine

Persian wine, also called Mey (fa) and Badeh (fa), is a cultural symbol and tradition in Iran (Persia), and has a significant presence in Persian mythology, Persian poetry and Persian miniatures.

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Pervane Medrese

Pervane Medrese (Pervane Medresesi) is a historic madrasa, a Islamic school, in Sinop, Turkey.

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Peter Adds

Peter Adds is Wellington-based academic, treaty negotiator and former head of Victoria University of Wellington's Te Kawa a Māui/School of Māori Studies.

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Peter Akkermans

Peter M. M. G. Akkermans (born Hulsberg, 1957) is a Dutch archaeologist and Professor of Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology at Leiden University.

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Peter Andreas Munch

Peter Andreas Munch (15 December 1810 – 25 May 1863), usually known as P. A. Munch, was a Norwegian historian, known for his work on the medieval history of Norway.

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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 Chippindale

Peter Chippindale (4 July 1945 – 10 August 2014) was a British newspaper journalist and author.

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Peter Connolly

Peter Connolly FSA (8 May 1935 – 2 May 2012) was a renowned British scholar of the ancient world, Greek and Roman military equipment historian, reconstructional archaeologist and illustrator.

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Peter Didsbury

Peter Didsbury (born 1946) is an English poet who was born in Fleetwood, Lancashire but lived most of his life in Hull, in the East Riding of Yorkshire.

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Peter Drewett

Peter Ladson Drewett (1947 – 1 April 2013) was an English archaeologist and academic, best known for his work in Sussex.

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Peter Englund

Peter Mikael Englund (born 4 April 1957) is a Swedish author and historian.

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Peter Friese

Peter Friese (born 23 March 1952, Siemianowice Śląskie, Poland), is a German art historian and curator.

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Peter Garlake

Peter Garlake (11 January 1934 - 2 December 2011) was a Zimbabwean archaeologist and art historian, who made influential contributions to the study of Great Zimbabwe and Ife, Nigeria.

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Peter Harbison

Peter Harbison (born 1939) is an Irish archaeologist and member of the Royal Irish Academy.

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Peter Hinton

Peter Hinton is a British archaeologist and the current Chief Executive of the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists.

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Peter Hiscock

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

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Peter J. Reynolds

Peter John Reynolds (6 November 1939 – 26 September 2001) was a British archaeologist known for his research in experimental archaeology and the British Iron Age and for being recruited as the first director of Butser Ancient Farm, a working replica of an Iron Age farmstead in Hampshire.

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Peter James (historian)

Peter James is a British historian and author specializing in the ancient history and archaeology of the Eastern Mediterranean region, with key related interests being chronology (dating techniques), ancient technology and astronomy, and sub-Roman Britain.

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Peter Kingsley (scholar)

Peter Kingsley (born 1953) is the author of four books and numerous articles on ancient philosophy, including Ancient Philosophy, Mystery and Magic, In the Dark Places of Wisdom, Reality, and A Story Waiting to Pierce You: Mongolia, Tibet and the Destiny of the Western World.

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Peter Ladefoged

Peter Nielsen Ladefoged (17 September 1925 – 24 January 2006) was a British linguist and phonetician who travelled the world to document the distinct sounds of endangered languages and pioneered ways to collect and study data.

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Peter Lampe

Peter Lampe (born 28 January 1954) is a German Protestant theologian and Professor of New Testament Studies at the University of Heidelberg in Germany.

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Peter Levi

Peter Chad Tigar Levi, FSA, FRSL (16 May 1931 in Ruislip – 1 February 2000 in Frampton-on-Severn) was a poet, archaeologist, Jesuit priest, travel writer, biographer, academic and prolific reviewer and critic.

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Peter Marshall (author)

Peter Hugh Marshall (born 23 August 1946) is an English philosopher, historian, biographer, travel writer and poet.

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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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Peter Mieg

Peter Mieg (5 September 1906 – 7 December 1990) was a Swiss composer, painter and journalist.

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Peter N. Peregrine

Peter N. Peregrine (born November 29, 1963) is an American anthropologist, registered professional archaeologist, and academic.

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Peter Oluf Brøndsted

Peter Oluf Brøndsted (17 November 1780 – 26 June 1842), Danish archaeologist and traveller.

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Peter Rowley-Conwy

Peter Rowley-Conwy, (born 1951) is a British archaeologist.

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Peter Shinnie

Peter Lewis Shinnie (January 18, 1915 in London–July 9, 2007 in Calgary) was a British archaeologist and Africanist.

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Peter Ucko

Peter John Ucko FRAI FSA (27 July 1938 – 14 June 2007) was an influential English archaeologist.

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Peter van Dommelen

Peter van Dommelen is a Dutch archaeologist and academic, who specialises in the archaeology of the Western Mediterranean and Phoenician-Punic archaeology.

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Peter van Mensch

Peter van Mensch, PhD (born 7 June 1947, Gouda, Netherlands) is a distinguished scientist in the field of museology and a professor of Cultural Heritage at Amsterdam School of Arts.

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Peter Warren (archaeologist)

Peter Michael Warren, (born 23 June 1938) is a British archaeologist and academic, specialising in the Aegean Bronze Age.

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Peter Wescombe

Peter Wescombe (4 January 1932 – 25 November 2014) was a British diplomat, amateur archaeologist, historian and founding member of the Bletchley Park Trust.

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Peter Wilhelm Forchhammer

Peter Wilhelm Forchhammer (October 23, 1801 – January 8, 1894), was a German classical archaeologist born at Husum in Schleswig.

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Peter Wilhelm Lund

Peter Wilhelm Lund (14 June 1801 – 25 May 1880) was a Danish paleontologist, zoologist, archeologist and who spent most of his life working and living in Brazil.

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Peter Woodman

Peter Woodman (2 July 1943 – 24 January 2017) was an Irish archaeologist, an expert in the Mesolithic period in Ireland.

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Peterborough ware

Peterborough ware is a decorated pottery style of the early to middle Neolithic.

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Petersfield

Petersfield is a market town and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England.

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Petinesca

Petinesca is an archeological site on the territory of Studen, a community of the Canton of Bern, in Switzerland, where Celtic and Roman vestiges were found.

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Petnica

Petnica is a small village near Valjevo, Serbia.

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Petreto-Bicchisano

Petreto-Bicchisano is a commune in the Corse-du-Sud department of France on the island of Corsica.

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Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology in London is part of University College London Museums and Collections.

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Petrified Forest National Park

Petrified Forest National Park is a United States national park in Navajo and Apache counties in northeastern Arizona.

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Petroglyph Canyon

Petroglyph Canyon (24CB601) is an archaeologically significant canyon in the northwestern United States.

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Petrography

Petrography is a branch of petrology that focuses on detailed descriptions of rocks.

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Petrus Josephus Zoetmulder

Petrus Josephus Zoetmulder S.J. (January 29, 1906 – July 8, 1995) was a Dutch expert in the Old Javanese language.

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Pewsey

Pewsey is a large village and civil parish at the centre of the Vale of Pewsey in Wiltshire, about south of Marlborough and west of London.

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Peyote

Lophophora williamsii or peyote is a small, spineless cactus with psychoactive alkaloids, particularly mescaline.

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Pfeffelbach

Pfeffelbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Phaistos Disc

The Phaistos Disc (also spelled Phaistos Disk, Phaestos Disc) is a disk of fired clay from the Minoan palace of Phaistos on the island of Crete, possibly dating to the middle or late Minoan Bronze Age (second millennium B.C.). The disk is about 15 cm (5.9 in) in diameter and covered on both sides with a spiral of stamped symbols.

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Phang Nga Bay

Phang Nga Bay (อ่าวพังงา) is a 400 km2 bay in the Strait of Malacca between the island of Phuket and the mainland of the Malay peninsula of southern Thailand.

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Phantom time hypothesis

The phantom time hypothesis is a historical conspiracy theory asserted by Heribert Illig.

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Phase (archaeology)

In archaeology, a phase refers to the logical reduction of contexts recorded during excavation to near contemporary archaeological horizons that represent a distinct "phase" of previous land use.

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Phelps and Gorham Purchase

The Phelps and Gorham Purchase was the purchase in 1788 of of land in what is now western New York State from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for $1,000,000 (£300,000), to be paid in three annual installments, and the pre-emptive right to the title on the land from the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy for $5000 (£12,500).

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Phenomenology (archaeology)

In archaeology, phenomenology applies to the use of sensory experiences to view and interpret an archaeological site or cultural landscape.

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Phil Comeau

Phil Comeau (born 1956), CM is a Canadian film and television director, born in Saulnierville, Nova Scotia.

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Phil Harding (archaeologist)

Dr Philip 'Phil' Harding, FSA (born 25 January 1950) is a British field archaeologist.

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Philip Ainsworth Means

Philip Ainsworth Means (1892–1944) was an American born anthropologist and historian.

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Philip Caveney

Philip Caveney (born 1951) is a British children's author, best known for the Sebastian Darke, Alec Devlin and Movie Maniacs novels.

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Philip de Jersey

Philip de Jersey is a Guernsey archaeologist and numismatist.

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Philip Melanchthon

Philip Melanchthon (born Philipp Schwartzerdt; 16 February 1497 – 19 April 1560) was a German Lutheran reformer, collaborator with Martin Luther, the first systematic theologian of the Protestant Reformation, intellectual leader of the Lutheran Reformation, and an influential designer of educational systems.

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Philip Phillips (archaeologist)

Philip Phillips (11 August 1900 – 11 December 1994) was an influential archaeologist in the United States during the 20th century.

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Philip R. Davies

Philip R. Davies (1945-2018) was a British biblical scholar and archaeologist.

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Philip Rahtz

Philip Arthur Rahtz (11 March 1921 – 2 June 2011) was a British archaeologist.

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Philip Stott

Philip Stott (born England, 1945) is a professor emeritus of biogeography at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, and a former editor (1987–2004) of the Journal of Biogeography.

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Philipp Franz von Siebold

Philipp Franz Balthasar von Siebold (17 February 1796 – 18 October 1866) was a German physician, botanist, and traveler.

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Philipp J. J. Valentini

Philipp Johann Joseph Valentini (1828 – March 16, 1899)Encyclopedia Americana (1918–1920), Vol.

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Philippine jade artifacts

Philippine Jade Artifacts made from white and green nephrite and dating as far back as 2000–1500 BC, has been discovered at a number of archeological excavations in the Philippines since the 1930s.

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Phillips Exeter Academy

Phillips Exeter Academy (often called Exeter or PEA) is a coeducational independent school for boarding and day students in grades 9 though 12, and offers a postgraduate program.

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Philmont Scout Ranch

Philmont Scout Ranch is a large, rugged, mountainous ranch located near the town of Cimarron, New Mexico, covering 140,177 acres (219 sq mi; 567 km²) of wilderness in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of the Rocky Mountains of northern New Mexico.

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Philosophy of archaeology

The philosophy of archaeology seeks to investigate the foundations, methods and implications of the discipline of archaeology in order to further understanding of the human past and present.

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Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology

The Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology (formerly the Lowie Museum of Anthropology) is an anthropology museum located in Berkeley, California on the University of California, Berkeley campus.

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Phoenician alphabet

The Phoenician alphabet, called by convention the Proto-Canaanite alphabet for inscriptions older than around 1050 BC, is the oldest verified alphabet.

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Phoenician port of Beirut

The Phoenician port of Beirut, also known as the Phoenician Harbour of Beirut and archaeological site BEY039 is located between Rue Allenby and Rue Foch in Beirut, Lebanon.

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Photomapping

Photomapping involves the process of drawing a map from a photographic base.

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Phyllis Morse

Phyllis Morse (Anderson) (b. 1934) is an American archaeologist.

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Physician writer

Physician writers are physicians who write creatively in fields outside their practice of medicine.

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Physics

Physics (from knowledge of nature, from φύσις phýsis "nature") is the natural science that studies matterAt the start of The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Richard Feynman offers the atomic hypothesis as the single most prolific scientific concept: "If, in some cataclysm, all scientific knowledge were to be destroyed one sentence what statement would contain the most information in the fewest words? I believe it is that all things are made up of atoms – little particles that move around in perpetual motion, attracting each other when they are a little distance apart, but repelling upon being squeezed into one another..." and its motion and behavior through space and time and that studies the related entities of energy and force."Physical science is that department of knowledge which relates to the order of nature, or, in other words, to the regular succession of events." Physics is one of the most fundamental scientific disciplines, and its main goal is to understand how the universe behaves."Physics is one of the most fundamental of the sciences. Scientists of all disciplines use the ideas of physics, including chemists who study the structure of molecules, paleontologists who try to reconstruct how dinosaurs walked, and climatologists who study how human activities affect the atmosphere and oceans. Physics is also the foundation of all engineering and technology. No engineer could design a flat-screen TV, an interplanetary spacecraft, or even a better mousetrap without first understanding the basic laws of physics. (...) You will come to see physics as a towering achievement of the human intellect in its quest to understand our world and ourselves."Physics is an experimental science. Physicists observe the phenomena of nature and try to find patterns that relate these phenomena.""Physics is the study of your world and the world and universe around you." Physics is one of the oldest academic disciplines and, through its inclusion of astronomy, perhaps the oldest. Over the last two millennia, physics, chemistry, biology, and certain branches of mathematics were a part of natural philosophy, but during the scientific revolution in the 17th century, these natural sciences emerged as unique research endeavors in their own right. Physics intersects with many interdisciplinary areas of research, such as biophysics and quantum chemistry, and the boundaries of physics are not rigidly defined. New ideas in physics often explain the fundamental mechanisms studied by other sciences and suggest new avenues of research in academic disciplines such as mathematics and philosophy. Advances in physics often enable advances in new technologies. For example, advances in the understanding of electromagnetism and nuclear physics led directly to the development of new products that have dramatically transformed modern-day society, such as television, computers, domestic appliances, and nuclear weapons; advances in thermodynamics led to the development of industrialization; and advances in mechanics inspired the development of calculus.

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Phytolith

Phytoliths (from Greek, "plant stone") are rigid, microscopic structures made of silica, found in some plant tissues and persisting after the decay of the plant.

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Picture Rock Pass Petroglyphs Site

The Picture Rock Pass Petroglyphs Site is in northern Lake County, Oregon, United States.

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Piedimonte Matese

Piedimonte Matese Piedimonte Matese, is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Caserta in the Italian region of Campania, located about 82 km north of Naples and about 40 km north of Caserta.

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Piedra Museo

Piedra Museo is an archaeological site in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina, and one of the earliest known archaeological remains in the Americas.

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Pierce Site

The Pierce Site (also known as Pierce Mounds and Middens and 8FR14, and other numbers) is a Pre-Columbian archaeological site in Apalachicola, Florida.

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Pierre Benoit (archaeologist)

Maurice Benoit (3 August 1906 – 23 April 1987), better known as Pierre Benoit, was a French Catholic priest, exegete, and theologian.

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Pierre Colas

Pierre Robert Colas (January 13, 1976 – August 26, 2008) was a German anthropologist, archaeologist and epigrapher.

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Pierre Henri Larcher

Pierre Henri Larcher (12 October 1726 – 22 December 1812) was a French classical scholar and archaeologist.

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Pierre Lacau

Pierre Lacau (25 November 1873 – 26 March 1963) was a French Egyptologist and philologist.

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Pierre Lorillard IV

Pierre Lorillard IV (October 13, 1833 – July 7, 1901) was an American tobacco manufacturer and thoroughbred race horse owner.

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Pietro Gaietto

Pietro Gaietto is an Italian artist, scientist, and writer.

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Pietro la Vega

Pietro la Vega (died 1810) was a Spanish archaeologist and artist known for his drawings of the ruins of Pompeii, Herculaneum and Stabiae.

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Pietro Marcellino Corradini

Pietro Marcellino Corradini (2 June 1658 - 8 February 1743) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal.

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Pietro Romanelli

Pietro Romanèlli (born in Rome, Italy in 1889 - died in Rome, Italy in 1981) was an Italian archaeologist.

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Pietru Caxaro

Pietru "Peter" Caxaro (c. 14001485) was a Maltese philosopher and poet.

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Pigorini National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography

The Luigi Pigorini National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography is a public and research museum located in Rome, Italy.

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Pikimachay

Piki Mach'ay (Quechua piki flea, mach'ay cave,Diccionario Quechua - Español - Quechua, Academía Mayor de la Lengua Quechua, Gobierno Regional Cusco, Cusco 2005 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary) "flea cave", also spelled Pikimachay, Piquimachay, where machay means "drunkenness", "to get drunk" or "a spindle packed with thread") is an archaeological site in the Ayacucho Valley of Peru.

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Pilak, Tripura

Pilak is an archaeological site in the Santirbazar sub-division of South Tripura district of the Indian state of Tripura.

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Pillar Point Harbor

Pillar Point Harbor is a boat harbor created by a riprap jetty in San Mateo County, California immediately north of Half Moon Bay.

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Pilrig

Pilrig is a suburb of Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland.

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Pimicikamak

Pimicikamak is the namethe Anglicized version of its collective name.

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Pincevent

Pincevent is an archaeological site in the commune of La Grande-Paroisse in France, near the town of Montereau-Fault-Yonne (Seine-et-Marne).

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Pinckney Island National Wildlife Refuge

The Pinckney Island National Wildlife Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge located in Beaufort County, South Carolina between the mainland and Hilton Head Island.

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Pindai Caves

The Pindai Caves of New Caledonia are an archaeological and palaeontological site important for the study of prehistoric human settlement as well as of the Holocene fauna of the island.

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Piney Grove at Southall's Plantation

Piney Grove at Southall's Plantation is a property listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Charles City County, Virginia.

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Pinny Grylls

Pinny Grylls is a documentary filmmaker.

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Pinson Mounds

The Pinson Mounds comprise a prehistoric Native American complex located in Madison County, Tennessee in the region that is known as the Eastern Woodlands.

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Piotr Ignacy Bieńkowski

Piotr Ignacy Bieńkowski (1865 – 1925) was a Polish classical scholar and archaeologist, professor of Jagiellonian University.

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Piran Bishop

Piran Bishop (born 1961) is a British portraitist.

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Pirkko-Liisa Lehtosalo-Hilander

Pirkko-Liisa Lehtosalo-Hilander is a Finnish archaeologist.

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Piscataway Indian Nation and Tayac Territory

The Piscataway Indian Nation, also called Piscatawa, is a state-recognized tribe in Maryland that claims descent from the historic Piscataway tribe.

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Piscataway people

The Piscataway or Piscatawa, also referred to as the Piscataway Indian Nation, are Native Americans, once constituting the most populous and powerful Native polities of the Chesapeake Bay region.

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Pistachio

The pistachio (Pistacia vera), a member of the cashew family, is a small tree originating from Central Asia and the Middle East.

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Pistacia

Pistacia is a genus of flowering plants in the cashew family, Anacardiaceae.

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Pit-house

A pit-house (or pithouse) is a building that is partly dug into the ground, and covered by a roof.

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Pitcher (container)

In American English, a pitcher is a container with a spout used for storing and pouring contents which are liquid in form.

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Pitchers (ceramic material)

Pitchers are pottery that has been broken in the course of manufacture.

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Pitt Island

Pitt Island is the second largest island in the Chatham Archipelago, New Zealand.

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Pitt Rivers Museum

The Pitt Rivers Museum is a museum displaying the archaeological and anthropological collections of the University of Oxford in Oxford, England.

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Places in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

This is a list of places featured in Douglas Adams's science fiction series The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

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Plagues of Egypt

The Plagues of Egypt, also called the ten biblical plagues, were ten calamities that, according to the biblical Book of Exodus, God inflicted upon Egypt as a demonstration of power, after which the Pharaoh conceded to Moses' demands to let the enslaved Israelites go into the wilderness to make sacrifices.

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Plains of San Agustin

The Plains of San Agustin (sometimes listed as the Plains of San Augustin) is a region in the southwestern U.S. state of New Mexico in the San Agustin Basin, south of U.S. Highway 60.

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Plano cultures

The Plano cultures is a name given by archaeologists to a group of disparate hunter-gatherer communities that occupied the Great Plains area of North America during the Paleo-Indian period in the United States and the Paleo-Indian or Archaic period in Canada.

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Plano point

In archeology, Plano point is flaked stone projectile points and tools created by the various Plano cultures of the North American Great Plains between 9000 BC and 6000 BC for hunting, and possibly to kill other humans.

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Platt Island

Platt Island is an archaeological site near Miles City, Florida.

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Playroom (film)

Playroom is a 1990 American horror film directed by Manny Coto in his directorial debut.

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Plaza Site

The Plaza Site is an archaeological site near Ochopee, Florida.

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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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Pleistocene human diet

The diet of known human ancestors varies dramatically over time.

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Pleven Regional Historical Museum

The Pleven Regional Historical Museum (Регионален исторически музей — Плевен), founded in 1953, is one of the largest museums in Bulgaria.

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Pliny the Elder

Pliny the Elder (born Gaius Plinius Secundus, AD 23–79) was a Roman author, naturalist and natural philosopher, a naval and army commander of the early Roman Empire, and friend of emperor Vespasian.

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Plio-Pleistocene

The term Plio-Pleistocene refers to an informally described geological pseudo-period, which begins about 5 million years ago (mya) and, drawing forward, combines the time ranges of the formally defined Pliocene and Pleistocene epochs—marking from about 5 mya to about 12 kya.

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Plot device

A plot device, or plot mechanism, is any technique in a narrative used to move the plot forward.

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PNA

PNA or Pna has a variety of meanings.

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Pocahontas Island

Pocahontas Island is a peninsula in Petersburg, Virginia; it is located on the north side of the Appomattox River.

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Podgračeno

Podgračeno is a small settlement on the right bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Brežice in eastern Slovenia.

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Point Lonsdale Lighthouse

Point Lonsdale Lighthouse, also known as the Point Lonsdale Signal Station, is close to the township of Point Lonsdale in the Borough of Queenscliffe, Victoria, Australia.

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Point of Pines Sites

Point of Pines Sites is a set of archaeological sites in the U.S. state of Arizona that are significant for associations with Ancestral Pueblo, Mogollon and Hohokam cultures.

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Point Pleasant Park

Point Pleasant Park is a large, mainly forested municipal park at the southern tip of the Halifax peninsula.

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Point Rosee

Point Rosee (French: Pointe Rosée), previously known as Stormy Point, is a headland near Codroy at the southwest end of the island of Newfoundland, on the Atlantic coast of Canada.

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Pointe-à-Callière Museum

Pointe-à-Callière Museum is a museum of archaeology and history in Old Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

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Pointed hat

Pointed hats have been a distinctive item of headgear of a wide range of cultures throughout history.

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Poitiers

Poitiers is a city on the Clain river in west-central France.

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Polans (eastern)

The Polans (Polyany), also Polianians, were an East Slavic tribe between the 6th and the 9th century, which inhabited both sides of the Dnieper river from Liubech to Rodnia and also down the lower streams of the rivers Ros', Sula, Stuhna, Teteriv, Irpin', Desna and Pripyat.

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Polavaram Project

Polavaram Project is a multi-purpose irrigation project which has been accorded national project status by the union government of India.

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Polhill Anglo-Saxon cemetery

Polhill Anglo-Saxon cemetery is a place of burial that was used in the seventh and eighth centuries CE.

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Poliochne

Poliochne, often cited under its modern name Poliochni (Πολιόχνη), was an ancient settlement on the east coast of the island of Lemnos.

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Political economy

Political economy is the study of production and trade and their relations with law, custom and government; and with the distribution of national income and wealth.

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Politics of archaeology in Israel and Palestine

The politics of archaeology in Israel and Palestine refers to the significance of archaeology in the politics and social fabric of Israel and Palestine.

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Pollen

Pollen is a fine to coarse powdery substance comprising pollen grains which are male microgametophytes of seed plants, which produce male gametes (sperm cells).

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Pollen zone

Pollen zones are a system of subdividing the last glacial period and Holocene paleoclimate using the data from pollen cores.

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Polly Schaafsma

Polly Dix Schaafsma is an American archaeologist, best known for her publications on Native American rock art.

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Polynesian navigation

Traditional Polynesian navigation was used for thousands of years to make long voyages across thousands of miles of the open Pacific Ocean.

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Polynesian outlier

Polynesian outliers are a number of culturally Polynesian societies that geographically lie outside the main region of Polynesian influence, known as the Polynesian Triangle; instead, Polynesian outliers are scattered in the two other Pacific subregions: Melanesia and Micronesia.

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Polytheism

Polytheism (from Greek πολυθεϊσμός, polytheismos) is the worship of or belief in multiple deities, which are usually assembled into a pantheon of gods and goddesses, along with their own religions and rituals.

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Pomo

The Pomo are an indigenous people of California.

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Pompeiopolis

Pompeiopolis (Πομπηιούπολις) was a Roman city in ancient Paphlagonia, located near Taşköprü, Kastamonu Province in the Black Sea Region of Turkey.

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Pompeys Pillar National Monument

--> Pompeys Pillar National Monument is a rock formation located in south central Montana, United States.

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Ponca

The Ponca (Páⁿka iyé: Páⁿka or Ppáⁿkka pronounced) are a Midwestern Native American tribe of the Dhegihan branch of the Siouan language group.

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Ponca Fort

Nanza is the Ponca name for what is now called Ponca Fort.

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Ponca Tribe of Nebraska

The Ponca Tribe of Nebraska is one of two federally recognized tribes of Ponca people.

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Pontefract Museum

Pontefract Museum is a local museum in Pontefract, West Yorkshire, England.

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Pontifical Academy of Archaeology

The Pontifical Academy of Archaeology (Pontificia Accademia Romana di Archeologia) is an academic honorary society established in Rome by the Catholic Church for the advancement of Christian archaeological study.

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Pontine Marshes

Lake Fogliano, a coastal lagoon in the Pontine Plain. The Pontine Marshes, termed in Latin Pomptinus Ager by Titus Livius, Pomptina Palus (singular) and Pomptinae Paludes (plural) by Pliny the Elder,Natural History 3.59.

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Ponza

Ponza (Italian: isola di Ponza) is the largest island of the Italian Pontine Islands archipelago, located south of Cape Circeo in the Tyrrhenian Sea.

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Pool of Bethesda

The Pool of Bethesda is a pool of water in the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem, on the path of the Beth Zeta Valley.

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Pope Damasus I

Pope Damasus I (c. 305 – 11 December 384) was Pope of the Catholic Church, from October 366 to his death in 384.

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Pope Pius XII

Pope Pius XII (Pio XII), born Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli (2 March 18769 October 1958), was the Pope of the Catholic Church from 2 March 1939 to his death.

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Pope Pius XII and Judaism

The relations between Pope Pius XII and Judaism have long been controversial, especially those questions that surround Pope Pius XII and the Holocaust.

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Porolissum

Porolissum was an ancient Roman city in Dacia.

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Porphyrius Uspensky

Bishop Porphyrius (Епископ Порфирий, secular name Konstantin Aleksandrovich Uspensky, Константин Александрович Успенский; 8 September 1804 - 19 April 1885), was a Russian traveller, theologian, orientalist, archaeologist and byzantinologist, founder of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem and also discovered several ancient codices.

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Port Tobacco Historic District

Port Tobacco Historic District is a national historic district in Port Tobacco, Charles County, Maryland.

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Port Tobacco Village, Maryland

Port Tobacco, officially Port Tobacco Village, is a town in Charles County, in southern Maryland, United States.

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Portable Antiquities Scheme

The Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) is a voluntary programme run by the United Kingdom government to record the increasing numbers of small finds of archaeological interest found by members of the public.

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Portavant Mound

The Portavant Mound (also known as the Portavant Mound Site or Snead Island Temple Mound or Portavant Indian Mound) is an archaeological site on Snead Island within the Emerson Point Preserve, just west of Palmetto, Florida.

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Portbraddon Cave

Portbraddon Cave (also spelled Portbradden, Portbraddan) is a relict sea cave located near Portbraddon, County Antrim on the north coast of Northern Ireland.

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Porter's Bar Site

The Porter's Bar Site is a Pre-Columbian archaeological site in Eastpoint, Florida.

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Porter–MacKenzie debate

The Porter–MacKenzie debate is a historiographical disagreement in the field of Modern British and Imperial History over the extent to which colonialism played an important part of British culture during the 19th and 20th centuries.

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Porticus

A porticus, in church architecture and archaeology, is usually a small room in a church.

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Portraits of the historical Jesus

Portraits of the historical Jesus refers to the various biographies of Jesus that have been constructed in the three separate scholarly quests for the historical Jesus that have taken place in the past two centuries, each with distinct characteristics and developing new and different research criteria.

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Portskewett

Portskewett (Porthsgiwed or Porthysgewin) is a community (parish) and village in Monmouthshire, south east Wales.

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Post-Classic stage

In the classification of the archaeology of the Americas, the Post-Classic Stage is a term applied to some Precolumbian cultures, typically ending with local contact with Europeans.

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Post-excavation analysis

Post-excavation analysis constitutes processes that are used to study archaeological materials after an excavation is completed.

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Post-processual archaeology

Post-processual archaeology, which is sometimes alternately referred to as the interpretative archaeologies by its adherents, is a movement in archaeological theory that emphasizes the subjectivity of archaeological interpretations.

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Postgraduate education

Postgraduate education, or graduate education in North America, involves learning and studying for academic or professional degrees, academic or professional certificates, academic or professional diplomas, or other qualifications for which a first or bachelor's degree generally is required, and it is normally considered to be part of higher education.

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Posthole

In archaeology a posthole or post-hole is a cut feature used to hold a surface timber or stone.

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Postpipe

In archaeology, a postpipe (or post pipe) is the remains of an upright timber placed in a posthole.

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Pot boiler

In an archaeological / anthropological context, the term refers to a stone used to move heat from a fire to a vessel to raise the temperature of water in the vessel, including for cooking.

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Pottery

Pottery is the ceramic material which makes up pottery wares, of which major types include earthenware, stoneware and porcelain.

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Poverty Point

Poverty Point State Historic Site (Pointe de Pauvreté; 16 WC 5) is a prehistoric earthworks of the Poverty Point culture, located in present-day northeastern Louisiana.

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Powell-Cotton Museum

The Powell-Cotton Museum is situated in Quex Park, Birchington, Kenthttp://www.quexpark.co.uk/visitors/how-to-get-here.html and houses the diverse personal collections of hunter and explorer, Percy Powell-Cotton.

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Powhatan

The Powhatan People (sometimes Powhatans) (also spelled Powatan) are an Indigenous group traditionally from Virginia.

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Powhatan (Native American leader)

Powhatan (June 17, 1545 April 1618), whose proper name was Wahunsenacawh (alternately spelled Wahunsenacah, Wahunsunacock or Wahunsonacock), was the paramount chief of Tsenacommacah, an alliance of Algonquian-speaking Virginia Indians in the Tidewater region of Virginia at the time English settlers landed at Jamestown in 1607.

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Powhatan's Chimney

Powhatan's Chimney is located at present day Wicomico, in Gloucester County, Virginia, United States.

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PPG 16

Planning Policy Guidance 16: Archaeology and Planning commonly abbreviated as PPG 16, was a document produced by the UK Government to advise local planning authorities in England and Wales on the treatment of archaeology within the planning process.

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Practical Yolk

Practical Yolk is a Woody Woodpecker cartoon that was released in theaters on May 1, 1966.

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Prakashchandra Pandurang Shirodkar

Prakashchandra Pandurang Shirodkar, the eldest son of late Pandurang Purushottam Shirodkar, is an Indologist, archaeologist, writer, one of the most prominent freedom fighters of Goa, and first speaker of the Goa, Daman and Diu Legislative Assembly).

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Prambanan

Prambanan or Rara Jonggrang (Rara Jonggrang) is a 9th-century Hindu temple compound in Central Java, Indonesia, dedicated to the Trimurti, the expression of God as the Creator (Brahma), the Preserver (Vishnu) and the Transformer (Shiva).

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Praskovya Uvarova

Praskovya Sergeevna Uvarova (Russian: Прасковья Сергеевна Уварова), née Scherbatova (Щербатова), (9 April 1840, Bobriki, Kharkov Governorate – 30 June 1924, Dobrna), was an amateur Russian archaeologist.

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Pre-Columbian Ecuador

Pre-Columbian Ecuador included numerous indigenous cultures, who thrived for thousands of years before the ascent of the Incan Empire.

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Pre-Columbian Mexico

The pre-Columbian history of the territory now comprising contemporary Mexico is known through the work of archaeologists and epigraphers, and through the accounts of the conquistadors, clergymen, and indigenous chroniclers of the immediate post-conquest period.

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Pre-Columbian period in Venezuela

The Pre-Columbian period in Venezuela refers to the period before the Spanish colonization of the Americas in the 16th century, known as the Pre-Columbian era.

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Predictive modelling

Predictive modelling uses statistics to predict outcomes.

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Prehistoric archaeology

History is the study of the past using written records.

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Prehistoric Asia

Prehistoric Asia refers to events in Asia during the period of human existence prior to the invention of writing systems or the documentation of recorded history.

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Prehistoric Britain

Several species of humans have intermittently occupied Britain for almost a million years.

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Prehistoric Cyprus

The Prehistoric Period is the oldest part of Cypriot history.

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Prehistoric Egypt

The prehistory of Egypt spans the period from earliest human settlement to the beginning of the Early Dynastic Period of Egypt around 3100 BC, starting with the first Pharaoh, Narmer for some egyptologists, Hor-Aha for others, (also known as Menes).

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Prehistoric Iberia

The prehistory of the Iberian Peninsula begins with the arrival of the first hominins 1.2 million years ago and ends with the Punic Wars, when the territory enters the domains of written history.

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Prehistoric Ireland

The prehistory of Ireland has been pieced together from archaeological and genetic evidence; it begins with the first evidence of humans in Ireland around 12,500 years ago and finishes with the start of the historical record around 400 AD.

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Prehistoric Korea

Prehistoric Korea is the era of human existence in the Korean Peninsula for which written records do not exist.

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Prehistoric music

Prehistoric music (previously primitive music) is a term in the history of music for all music produced in preliterate cultures (prehistory), beginning somewhere in very late geological history.

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Prehistoric Orkney

Prehistoric Orkney refers to a period in the human occupation of the Orkney archipelago of Scotland that was the latter part of these islands' prehistory.

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Prehistoric Rock Art Sites in the Côa Valley

The Prehistoric Rock-Art Site of the Côa Valley is an open-air Paleolithic archaeological site located in a region of northeastern Portugal, near the border with Spain.

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Prehistoric Scotland

Archaeology and geology continue to reveal the secrets of prehistoric Scotland, uncovering a complex past before the Romans brought Scotland into the scope of recorded history.

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Prehistoric warfare

Prehistoric warfare refers to war that occurred between societies without recorded history.

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Prehistory

Human prehistory is the period between the use of the first stone tools 3.3 million years ago by hominins and the invention of writing systems.

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Prehistory and protohistory of Poland

The prehistory and protohistory of Poland can be traced from the first appearance of Homo species on the territory of modern-day Poland, to the establishment of the Polish state in the 10th century AD, a span of roughly 500,000 years.

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Prehistory of Anatolia

The prehistory of Anatolia stretches from the Paleolithic erahttp://www.sci-news.com/archaeology/science-stone-tool-turkey-02370.html through to the appearance of classical civilisation in the middle of the 1st millennium BC.

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Prehistory of Pampanga

Pampanga lies within the Central Plain region and has a total land area of 2,180.70 square kilometers.

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Prehistory of Transylvania

The Prehistory of Transylvania describes what can be learned about the region known as Transylvania through archaeology, anthropology, comparative linguistics and other allied sciences.

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Prehistory of West Virginia

The Prehistory of West Virginia spans ancient times until the arrival of Europeans in the early 17th century.

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Presa-Tusiu

Presa-Tusiu is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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President's House (Philadelphia)

The President's House, at 524–30 Market Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was the third Presidential Mansion.

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Preston Holder

Preston Holder (September 10, 1907, Wabash, Indiana – June 3, 1980, Lincoln, Nebraska) was an American archaeologist and photographer.

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Prewitt–Allen Archaeological Museum

The Prewitt-Allen Archeological Museum is a small archaeology museum at Corban University in Salem, Oregon, United States.

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Priam's Treasure

Priam’s Treasure is a cache of gold and other artifacts discovered by classical archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann.

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Prillwitz idols

Prillwitz idols is a large number of bronze figurines and bronze relief plates allegedly found in late 17th century.

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Prince Edward Island

Prince Edward Island (PEI or P.E.I.; Île-du-Prince-Édouard) is a province of Canada consisting of the island of the same name, and several much smaller islands.

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Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn Anthropology Centre

Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn Anthropology Centre (SAC) is an academic institution under Ministry of Culture in Taling Chan District, Bangkok, Thailand, established in 1992, with the aim of the systematic gathering, processing, and maintenance of anthropological data scattered throughout the country.

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Princeton University Press

Princeton University Press is an independent publisher with close connections to Princeton University.

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Priniatikos Pyrgos

Priniatikos Pyrgos is an archaeological site near Istron River, in the eastern Cretan regional unit of Lasithi, (Greece).

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Prishantha Gunawardena

Prishantha Gunawardena (Sinhala:ප්‍රිශාන්ත ගුණවර්ධන) (born on 1964) is a leading archeologist and writer of Sri Lanka.

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Prismatic blade

In archaeology, a prismatic blade is a long, narrow, specialized stone flake tool with a sharp edge, like a small razor blade.

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Processing fluency theory of aesthetic pleasure

The processing fluency theory of aesthetic pleasure is a theory in psychological aesthetics on how people experience beauty.

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Processual archaeology

Processual archaeology (formerly the New Archaeology) is a form of archaeological theory that had its genesis in 1958 with the work of Gordon Willey and Philip Phillips, Method and Theory in American Archeology, in which the pair stated that "American archaeology is anthropology or it is nothing" (Willey and Phillips, 1958:2), a rephrasing of Frederic William Maitland's comment: "My own belief is that by and by anthropology will have the choice between being history and being nothing." This idea implied that the goals of archaeology were, in fact, the goals of anthropology, which were to answer questions about humans and human society.

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Professor

Professor (commonly abbreviated as Prof.) is an academic rank at universities and other post-secondary education and research institutions in most countries.

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Professor Calculus

Professor Cuthbert Calculus (Professeur Tryphon Tournesol, meaning "Professor Tryphon Sunflower"), is a fictional character in The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.

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Professor Hershel Layton

is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the Professor Layton fictional universe, created by Level-5.

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Professor Layton

Professor Layton is a puzzle adventure game series and multimedia franchise developed by Level-5.

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Professor of the Archaeology of the Roman Empire

The Professorship of the Archaeology of the Roman Empire is a chair at the Institute of Archaeology of the University of Oxford, England.

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Progressive creationism

Progressive creationism (see for comparison intelligent design) is the religious belief that God created new forms of life gradually over a period of hundreds of millions of years.

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Projectile point

In archaeological terms, a projectile point is an object that was hafted to weapon that was capable of being thrown or projected, such as a spear, dart, or arrow, or perhaps used as a knife.

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Prophecy in the Seventh-day Adventist Church

Seventh-day Adventists believe that Ellen G. White, one of the church's co-founders, was a prophet, understood today as an expression of the New Testament spiritual gift of prophecy.

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Prosper Mérimée

Prosper Mérimée (28 September 1803 – 23 September 1870) was an important French writer in the school of Romanticism, and one of the pioneers of the novella, a short novel or long short story.

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Protestant Cemetery, Rome

The Cimitero Acattolico ("Non-Catholic Cemetery") of Rome, often referred to as the Cimitero dei protestanti ("Protestant Cemetery") or Cimitero degli Inglesi ("Englishmen's Cemetery"), is a public cemetery in the rione ('region') of Testaccio in Rome.

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Proto-Indo-European homeland

The Proto-Indo-European homeland (or Indo-European homeland) was the prehistoric urheimat of the Indo-European languages – the region where their reconstructed common ancestor, the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), was originally spoken.

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Proto-Indo-European society

Proto-Indo-European society is the hypothesized culture of the ancient speakers of Proto-Indo-European, ancestors of all modern Indo–European ethnic groups who are speakers of Indo-European languages.

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Proto-Indo-Europeans

The Proto-Indo-Europeans were the prehistoric people of Eurasia who spoke Proto-Indo-European (PIE), the ancestor of the Indo-European languages according to linguistic reconstruction.

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Protochronism

Protochronism (anglicized from the Protocronism, from the Ancient Greek terms for "first in time") is a Romanian term describing the tendency to ascribe, largely relying on questionable data and subjective interpretations, an idealized past to the country as a whole.

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Protohistory

Protohistory is a period between prehistory and history, during which a culture or civilization has not yet developed writing but other cultures have already noted its existence in their own writings.

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Protohistory of West Virginia

The protohistoric period of the state of West Virginia in the United States began in the mid-sixteenth century with the arrival of European trade goods.

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Proton magnetometer

The proton magnetometer, also known as the proton precession magnetometer (PPM), uses the principle of Earth's field nuclear magnetic resonance (EFNMR) to measure very small variations in the Earth's magnetic field, allowing ferrous objects on land and at sea to be detected.

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Provenance

Provenance (from the French provenir, 'to come from/forth') is the chronology of the ownership, custody or location of a historical object.

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Province of Burgos

The province of Burgos is a province of northern Spain, in the northeastern part of the autonomous community of Castile and León.

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Province of Tenerife

Province of Tenerife, also Province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Provincia de Santa Cruz de Tenerife), is a province of Spain, consisting of the western part of the autonomous community of the Canary Islands.

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Pseudoarchaeology

Pseudoarchaeology—also known as alternative archaeology, fringe archaeology, fantastic archaeology, or cult archaeology—refers to interpretations of the past from outside of the archaeological science community, which reject the accepted datagathering and analytical methods of the discipline.

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Pseudoarchaeology of Cornwall

The pseudoarchaeology of Cornwall concerns aspects of the study of Cornwall that fall outside mainstream archaeology, history, and cultural studies.

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Pseudoscientific language comparison

Pseudoscientific language comparison is a form of pseudo-scholarship that has the objective of establishing historical associations between languages by naive postulations of similarities between them.

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Psychic archaeology

Psychic archaeology is a loose collection of practices involving the application of paranormal phenomena to problems in archaeology.

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Psychobiography

Psychobiography aims to understand historically significant individuals, such as artists or political leaders, through the application of psychological theory and research.

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Pu'upehe Platform

Puupehe Platform, also known Puu Pehe and in tourist literature as Sweetheart Rock, is a triangular sea stack 150 feet off the peninsula separating Mānele Bay and Hulopookinae Bay on the island of Lānaokinai, Hawaiokinai.

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Puabi

Puabi (Akkadian: "Word of my father"), also called Shubad due to a misinterpretation by Sir Charles Leonard Woolley, was an important person in the Sumerian city of Ur, during the First Dynasty of Ur (c. 2600 BC).

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Public Archaeology (journal)

Public Archaeology is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal established in 2000, edited by Tim Schadla-Hall and published by Maney Publishing.

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Puducherry

Puducherry (literally New Town in Tamil), formerly known as Pondicherry, is a union territory of India.

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Pueblo

Pueblos are modern and old communities of Native Americans in the Southwestern United States.

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Pueblo Grande de Nevada

Pueblo Grande de Nevada, (26 CK 2148), a complex of villages located near Overton, Nevada and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Puffin Island (County Kerry)

Puffin Island (Oileán na gCánóg in Irish) is an uninhabited steep rocky island lying off the coast of the Iveragh Peninsula, County Kerry, Ireland.

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Pughjaredda

Pughjaredda is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Pukara of La Compañía

Pukara de La Compañia is an archaeological site containing the remains of a promaucae fortress, later used by the Incas, located on the large hill overlooking the village of La Compañia, a village in the commune of Graneros, Chile.

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Pumsaint

Pumsaint is a village in Carmarthenshire, Wales situated half way between Llanwrda and Lampeter on the A482 in the valley of the Afon Cothi.

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Puquios

The puquios are an old system of subterranean aqueducts near the city of Nazca, Peru.

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Purbeck Hills

The Purbeck Hills, also called the Purbeck Ridge, are a ridge of chalk downs in Dorset, England.

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Purge (occupied Japan)

The Purge in Japan was the prohibition of designated Japanese people from engaging in public service, by order of the General Headquarters of the Allied Forces (GHQ) after Japan's defeat in World War II.

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Puritama Hot Springs

Puritama Hot Springs (Spanish: Termas Baños de Puritama) is a series of eight large pools of geothermal spring water located at the bottom of a canyon in the Atacama Desert, in the Antofagasta Region in the north of Chile.

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Purnia division

Purnia division is an administrative geographical unit of Bihar state of India.

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Pyotr Fyodorovich Lysenko

Pyotr Fyodorovich Lysenko (Пё́тр Фё́дорович Лысе́нко, Пё́тар Фё́даравіч Лысе́нка), born on 16 September 1931, in Zarechany, Polotsk district, Vitebsk Region, Belarus, a prominent Belarusian archaeologist, Doctor of History (since 1988), professor (since 1993).

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Pyotr Karyshkovsky

Pyotr Osipovich Karyshkovskij-Ikar (March 12, 1921, Odessa – March 6, 1988, Odessa) - Ukrainian Soviet historian, numismatist, a scholar and lexicographer.

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Pyracurse

Pyracurse is an isometric arcade adventure game released by Hewson in for the ZX Spectrum.

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Pyramid of Menkaure

The Pyramid of Menkaure is the smallest of the three main Pyramids of Giza, located on the Giza Plateau in the southwestern outskirts of Cairo, Egypt.

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Pyramid of Neferefre

The Pyramid of Neferefre, also known as the Pyramid of Raneferef, is an unfinished Egyptian pyramid from the Fifth Dynasty, located in the necropolis of Abusir, Egypt.

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Pyramid of the Moon

The Pyramid of the Moon is the second largest pyramid in modern-day San Juan Teotihuacán, Mexico, after the Pyramid of the Sun.

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Pyramidion

A pyramidion (plural: pyramidia) is the uppermost piece or capstone of an Egyptian pyramid or obelisk, in archaeological parlance.

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Pyramids of Güímar

The Pyramids of Güímar refer to six rectangular pyramid-shaped, terraced structures built from lava stone without the use of mortar.

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Pyramids of Mars

Pyramids of Mars is the third serial of the 13th season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts on BBC1 from 25 October to 15 November 1975.

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Pyre

A pyre (πυρά; pyrá, from πῦρ, pyr, "fire"), also known as a funeral pyre, is a structure, usually made of wood, for burning a body as part of a funeral rite or execution.

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Pyrenae

Pyrenae, Revista de Prehistòria i Antiguitat de la Mediterrània Occidental / Journal of Western Mediterranean Prehistory and Antiquity, is a peer-reviewed scientific journal of archeology published by the Secció de Prehistòria i Arqueologia (Section of Prehistory and Archaeology) of the University of Barcelona.

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Pyx

A pyx or pix (pyxis, transliteration of Greek: πυξίς, boxwood receptacle, from πύξος, box tree) is a small round container used in the Catholic, Old Catholic and Anglican Churches to carry the consecrated host (Eucharist), to the sick or those otherwise unable to come to a church in order to receive Holy Communion.

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Q'umarkaj

Q'umarkaj, (K'iche') (sometimes rendered as Gumarkaaj, Gumarcaj, Cumarcaj or Kumarcaaj) is an archaeological site in the southwest of the El Quiché department of Guatemala.

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Qadan culture

The Qadan culture (13,000-9,000 BC) was an ancient culture that, archaeological evidence suggests, originated in Upper Egypt (present day south Egypt) approximately 15,000 years ago Phillipson, DW: African Archaeology page 149.

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Qal'at Bustra

Qal'at Bustra or Qalat Bustra is an archaeological site in Lebanon, close to the border of the Sheba Farms region of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, about 5 km ENE of Ghajar.

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Qaraoun

Qaraoun is a Lebanese village, 85 km from Beirut, known for its Lake Qaraoun in the Beqaa Valley formed by the El Wauroun Dam built in 1959.

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Qatar Foundation

Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (مؤسسة قطر) is a semi-private chartered, non-profit organization in Qatar, founded in 1995 by then-emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and his second wife Moza bint Nasser.

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Qatar Museums Authority

Qatar Museums (formerly the Qatar Museums Authority) is a Qatari government entity that overseas the Museum of Islamic Art (MIA), Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, MIA Park, QM Gallery at Katara, ALRIWAQ DOHA Exhibition Space, the Al Zubarah World Heritage Site Visitor Centre, and archaeological projects throughout Qatar, as well as the development of future projects and museums that will highlight its collections across multiple areas of activity including Orientalist art, photography, sports, children’s education, and wildlife conservation.

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QEMSCAN

QEMSCAN is the name for an integrated automated mineralogy and petrography solution providing quantitative analysis of minerals, rocks and man-made materials.

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Qibla

The Qibla (قِـبْـلَـة, "Direction", also transliterated as Qiblah, Qibleh, Kiblah, Kıble or Kibla), is the direction that should be faced when a Muslim prays during Ṣalāṫ (صَـلَاة).

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Qijurittug

The Qijurittuq archaeological site (IbGk-3) is an archaeological site located on Drayton Island on the eastern shore of Hudson Bay, Nunavik, in Quebec, Canada.

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Qila Mubarak

Qila Mubarak (क़िला मुबारक, قلعہ مبارک), is historical monument in the heart of the city of Bathinda in Punjab, India.

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Qingzhou

Qingzhou (Chinese: 青州; Pinyin: Qīngzhōu), formerly Yidu County (益都县), is a county-level city, which is located in the west of Weifang City, Shandong Province, China.

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Qira, Haifa

Qira (قِيرة) was a Palestinian Arab village, located 23 kilometers southeast of Haifa.

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Qpid

"Qpid" is the 94th episode of the syndicated American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, the 20th episode of the fourth season.

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Quad Site (archaeological site)

The Quad Site is a series of Paleoindian localities in Limestone County near Decatur, Alabama.

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Quapaw

The Quapaw (or Arkansas and Ugahxpa) people are a tribe of Native Americans that coalesced in the Midwest and Ohio Valley.

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Quarles van Ufford

Quarles van Ufford (also: Quarles or Quarles de Quarles, stemming from Quarles) is the name of a Dutch family of English descent whose members have belonged to Dutch nobility since 1815.

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Quatremère de Quincy

Antoine-Chrysostome Quatremère de Quincy (21 October 1755 – 28 December 1849) was a French armchair archaeologist and architectural theorist, a Freemason, and an effective arts administrator and influential writer on art.

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Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Horncastle

Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Horncastle is a co-educational grammar school with academy status in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England.

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Queen Lane Apartments

Queen Lane Apartments opened in 1955 as one of several Post-War public housing hi-rise complexes in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania which were built and maintained by the Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA).

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Queenborough

Queenborough is a small town on the Isle of Sheppey in the Swale borough of Kent in South East England.

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Quimbaya Museum

Quimbaya Museum is a museum located in Armenia, Colombia designed by Colombian architect Rogelio Salmona.

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Quindaro Townsite

Quindaro Townsite is an archaeological district in the vicinity of North 27th Street and the Missouri Pacific Railroad tracks in Kansas City, Kansas.

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Quinoa

Quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa; (or, from Quechua kinwa or kinuwa) is a flowering plant in the amaranth family. It is a herbaceous annual plant grown as a grain crop primarily for its edible seeds. Quinoa is not a grass, but rather a pseudocereal botanically related to spinach and amaranth (Amaranthus spp.). Quinoa provides protein, dietary fiber, B vitamins, and dietary minerals in rich amounts above those of wheat, corn, rice or oats. It is gluten-free. After harvest, the seeds are processed to remove the bitter-tasting outer seed coat. Quinoa originated in the Andean region of northwestern South America, and was domesticated 3,000 to 4,000 years ago for human consumption in the Lake Titicaca basin of Peru and Bolivia, though archaeological evidence shows livestock uses 5,200 to 7,000 years ago.

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Quinta da Boa Vista

The Quinta da Boa Vista (Estate with the Good View) is a public park of great historical importance in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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Quipu

Quipu (also spelled khipu) or talking knots, were recording devices fashioned from strings historically used by a number of cultures, particularly in the region of Andean South America.

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Quirnbach, Kusel

Quirnbach/Pfalz is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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R. A. Stewart Macalister

Robert Alexander Stewart Macalister (8 July 1870 – 26 April 1950) was an Irish archaeologist.

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R. H. C. Davis

Ralph Henry Carless Davis (7 October 1918 in Oxford – 12 March 1991 in Oxford), always known publicly as R. H. C. Davis, was a British historian and educator specialising in the European Middle Ages.

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R. J. Hopper

Robert John Hopper, FSA (1910 – 3 July 1987), known as R. J. Hopper, was an archaeologist and historian of Ancient Greece.

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R. Nagaswamy

Ramachandran Nagaswamy (born 10 August 1930) is an Indian historian, archaeologist and epigraphist who is known for his work on temple inscriptions and art history of Tamil Nadu.

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R.R.R. Smith

Roland Ralph Redfern "Bert" Smith (born 30 January 1954) is a British classicist, archaeologist, and academic, specialising in the art and visual cultures of the ancient Mediterranean.

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R301 (Morocco)

R301 is a coastal highway in Western Morocco connecting the cities of Essaouira and El Jadida.

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Race and genetics

The relationship between race and genetics is relevant to the controversy concerning race classification.

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Rachel Maxwell-Hyslop

Rachel Maxwell-Hyslop, (née Kathleen Rachel Clay, 27 March 1914, London – 9 May 2011, Banbury) was a British archaeologist and scholar of the Ancient Near East.

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Rachis

Rachis is a biological term for a main axis or "shaft" (from the Greek ράχις, backbone, spine).

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Radagaisus

Radagaisus (died 23 August 406) was a Gothic king who led an invasion of Roman Italy in late 405 and the first half of 406.

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Radcliffe Emerson

Professor Radcliffe Archibald Emerson (c. 1855-?), M.A. Ox., D.C.L. (Ox.), L.L.D. (Edinburgh), F.B.A., FRS, FRGS, MAPS, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, Member of the American Philosophical Society, is one of the main characters in the Amelia Peabody historical mystery series by author Elizabeth Peters.

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Raden Panji Soejono

Professor Raden Panji Soejono (born 1926) is an Indonesian archaeologist.

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Radioanalytical chemistry

Radioanalytical chemistry focuses on the analysis of sample for their radionuclide content.

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Radiocarbon dating

Radiocarbon dating (also referred to as carbon dating or carbon-14 dating) is a method for determining the age of an object containing organic material by using the properties of radiocarbon, a radioactive isotope of carbon.

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Radiometric dating

Radiometric dating or radioactive dating is a technique used to date materials such as rocks or carbon, in which trace radioactive impurities were selectively incorporated when they were formed.

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Radionuclide

A radionuclide (radioactive nuclide, radioisotope or radioactive isotope) is an atom that has excess nuclear energy, making it unstable.

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Radish

The radish (Raphanus raphanistrum subsp. sativus) is an edible root vegetable of the Brassicaceae family that was domesticated in Europe in pre-Roman times.

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Radoslav Katičić

Radoslav Katičić (born in Zagreb, July 3, 1930) is a Croatian linguist, classical philologist, Indo-Europeanist, Slavist and Indologist, one of the most prominent Croatian scholars in the field of humanities.

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RAF Andover

RAF Andover is a former Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force station located west of Andover, Hampshire and north east of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.

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Rafael Manzano Martos

Rafael Manzano Martos (born in Cádiz, Spain on November 6, 1936) is a Spanish architect.

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Rahmatabad Mound

The Rahmatabad Mound or the Rahmatabad Tepe (5th millennium BC) is one of the most historically significant settlements on the Marvdasht plain, Persia (Iran) measuring 115 m in length and 75 m in width and 4.5 m in height.

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Raiders of the Lost Ark

Raiders of the Lost Ark (also known as Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark) is a 1981 American action adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg, written by Lawrence Kasdan from a story by George Lucas and Philip Kaufman.

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Raimondo Guarini

Raimondo Guarini (1765–1852) was an Italian archaeologist, epigrapher, poet, college president, and teacher.

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Raimund Karl

Raimund Karl (born September 15, 1969 in Vienna) is an Austrian archaeologist, Celticist and historian.

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Rainbow runner

The rainbow runner (Elagatis bipinnulata), also known as the rainbow yellowtail, Spanish jack and Hawaiian salmon, is a common species of pelagic marine fish of the jack family, Carangidae.

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Rainer Stadelmann

Dr.

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Rakovec, Brežice

Rakovec (in older sources also Radkovec,Leksikon občin kraljestev in dežel zastopanih v državnem zboru, vol. 4: Štajersko. 1904. Vienna: C. Kr. Dvorna in Državna Tiskarna, p. 8. Radkovetz) is a settlement on the right bank of the Sotla River in the Municipality of Brežice in eastern Slovenia.

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Ralf Isau

Ralf Isau (born 2 March 1956 in Berlin) is a German author of fantasy novels, often archaeology-themed.

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Ralph Merrifield

Ralph Merrifield (22 August 1913 9 January 1995) was an English museum curator and archaeologist.

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Ralph Regenvanu

Ralph John Regenvanu (born 20 September 1970 in Suva, FijiLaef Blong Mi, Sethy Regenvanu, op.cit., p.76) is a ni-Vanuatu anthropologist, artist and politician.

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Ralph Solecki

Ralph Stefan Solecki is an American archaeologist.

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Ralph Tate

Ralph Tate (11 March 1840 – 20 September 1901) was a British-born botanist and geologist, who was later active in Australia.

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Ralph Van Deman Magoffin

Ralph Van Deman Magoffin (1874–1942) was an American Classical scholar and archaeologist.

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Ram Chandra Kak

Ram Chandra Kak (5 June 1893 – 10 February 1983) was Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir during 1945–47.

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Ram Hill Colliery

Ram Hill Colliery, was a privately owned colliery in the Coalpit Heath area north-east of Bristol, England.

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Ram in a Thicket

The Ram in a Thicket is one of a pair of figures excavated in Ur, in southern Iraq, and which date from about 2600–2400 BC.

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Ram Loevy

Ram Loevy (Hebrew: רם לוי, born 1940) is an Israeli television director and screenwriter.

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Ram Sharan Sharma

Ram Sharan Sharma (26 November 1919 – 20 August 2011), commonly referred to as R. S. Sharma, was an eminent historian and academic of Ancient and early Medieval India.

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Ram V. Sutar

Ram Vanji Sutar (born 1925) is an Indian sculptor.

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Rama

Rama or Ram (Sanskrit: राम, IAST: Rāma), also known as Ramachandra, is a major deity of Hinduism.

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Ramallah

Ramallah (رام الله) is a Palestinian city in the central West Bank located north of Jerusalem at an average elevation of above sea level, adjacent to al-Bireh. It currently serves as the de facto administrative capital of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA). Ramallah was historically an Arab Christian town. Today Muslims form the majority of the population of nearly 27,092 in 2007, with Christians making up a significant minority.

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Raman Jaraš

Ramán Járaš (Belarusian: Рама́н ́Яраш) – Belarusian musician.

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Ramavarmapuram

Ramavarmapuram is the northern suburb of Thrissur City in Kerala.

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Ramesh Prasad Mohapatra

Ramesh Prasad Mohapatra (1 October 1939 – 14 January 1989) was an archaeologist and scholar on Orissan Studies.

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Ramilisonina

Ramilisonina is an archaeologist from Madagascar.

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Randolph–Macon College

Randolph–Macon College is a private, co-educational liberal arts college located in Ashland, Virginia, United States, near the capital city of Richmond.

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Range Creek

Range Creek, rising in the Book Cliffs in Emery County, Utah, is a high tributary of the Colorado River.

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Ranikot Fort

Ranikot Fort (رني ڪوٽ, قِلعہ رانی کوٹ) (also known as Rannikot) is a historical fort near Sann, Jamshoro District, Sindh, Pakistan.

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Ranmasu Uyana

Ranmasu Uyana is a park in Sri Lanka containing the ancient Magul Uyana (Royal Gardens).

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Ranuccio Bianchi Bandinelli

Ranuccio Bianchi Bandinelli (19 February 1900 – 17 January 1975) was an Italian archaeologist and art historian.

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Raoul Desribes

Reverend Father Raoul Desribes (born in 1856, died in 1940) was a French Jesuit archaeologist notable for his work on prehistory in Lebanon, particularly the archaeological site of Minet Dalieh at Ras Beirut.

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Raphael Pumpelly

Raphael Pumpelly (September 8, 1837 – August 10, 1923) was an American geologist and explorer.

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Rapture (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)

"Rapture" is the tenth episode of the fifth season of the television science fiction program series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

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Ras ir-Raħeb

Ras ir-Raħeb, known also as Ras il-Knejjes is a scenic limestone promontory in north western Malta, close to the hamlet of Baħrija.

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Rathsweiler

Rathsweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Rattleback

A rattleback is a semi-ellipsoidal top which will rotate on its axis in a preferred direction.

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Raumbach

Raumbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Raunds

Raunds is a small market town in rural Northamptonshire, England.

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Ravindra Singh Bisht

Ravindra Singh Bisht (R. S. Bisht) is an Indian archaeologist, known for his scholarship on Indus valley civilization and efforts to conserve Indian national monuments.

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Raymond A. Palmer

Raymond Arthur Palmer (August 1, 1910 – August 15, 1977) was an American editor of Amazing Stories from 1938 through 1949, when he left publisher Ziff-Davis to publish and edit Fate Magazine, and eventually many other magazines and books through his own publishing houses, including Amherst Press and Palmer Publications.

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Raymonden

Raymonden is a prehistoric cave near Chancelade in the French département Dordogne.

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Râșnov Citadel

Râșnov Citadel (Cetatea Râșnov, Rosenauer Burg) is a historic monument and landmark in Romania.

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Río Bec

Río Bec is a Pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site located in what is now southern portion of the Mexican state of Campeche.

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Rödelhausen

Rödelhausen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Rödermark

Rödermark is a town in the Offenbach district in the Regierungsbezirk of Darmstadt in Hesse, Germany, southeast of Frankfurt am Main and northeast of Darmstadt.

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Rúaidhrí de Valera

Rúaidhrí de Valera (3 November 1916 – 28 October 1978) was an Irish archaeologist most known for his work on the megalithic tombs of his country.

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Růžena Vacková

Růžena Vacková (23 April 1901 Velké Meziříčí – 14 December 1982 Prague) was a Czech art historian and theoritician, theatre critic and pedagogue.

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Re'eh

Re'eh, Reeh, R'eih, or Ree (— Hebrew for "see", the first word in the parashah) is the 47th weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the fourth in the Book of Deuteronomy.

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Re'im

Re'im (רֵעִים, lit. Friends) is a secular kibbutz in southern Israel, and one of the Gaza vicinity villages.

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Rebecca Bradley (novelist)

Rebecca Bradley is a Canadian novelist and archaeologist, with a doctorate in archaeology from the University of Cambridge.

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Receiver of Wreck

The Receiver of Wreck is an official who administers law dealing with maritime wrecks and salvage in some countries having a British administrative heritage.

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Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (born 26 February 1954) is a Turkish politician serving as President of Turkey since 2014.

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Recherche Archipelago

The Archipelago of the Recherche, known locally as the Bay of Isles, is a group of 105 islands, and over 1200 "obstacles to shipping", off the south coast of Western Australia.

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Records of the Past Exploration Society

The Records of the Past Exploration Society was set up in 1900 by Reverend Henry Mason Baum in Washington, D.C. Membership was made up of academics with degrees, church leaders and professionals, especially those with an interest in archaeology.

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Red Mountain (Birmingham)

Red Mountain is a long ridge running southwest-northeast and dividing Jones Valley from Shades Valley south of Birmingham, Alabama.

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Red Ocher people

The Red Ocher people were an indigenous people of North America.

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Rededjet

Rededjet (also readed as Ruddedet) is the name of a fictitious ancient Egyptian female hero appearing in the fifth chapter of a story told in the legendary Westcar Papyrus. She is said to have fulfilled a prophecy by giving birth to three future kings during the reign of king (pharaoh) Khufu (4th Dynasty), who received the prophecy from a magician named Dedi.

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Redstone Coke Oven Historic District

The Redstone Coke Oven Historic District is located at the intersection of State Highway 133 and Chair Mountain Stables Road outside Redstone, Colorado, United States.

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Redwood National and State Parks

The Redwood National and State Parks (RNSP) are a complex of several state and national parks located in the United States, along the coast of northern California.

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Reginald Allender Smith

Reginald A. (Allender) Smith (1873–1940) was an archaeologist, Keeper of British and Medieval Antiquities at the British Museum in the 1920s, and the author of several books.

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Reginald Bainbrigg

Reginald Bainbrigg, or Baynbridge (1545–1606), was an English schoolmaster and antiquary.

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Reginald Campbell Thompson

Reginald Campbell Thompson (21 August 1876 – 23 May 1941) was a British archaeologist, assyriologist, and cuneiformist.

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Reginald Stuart Poole

Reginald Stuart Poole (27 January 18328 February 1895) - known as Stuart Poole - was an English archaeologist, numismatist and orientalist.

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Reginald's Tower

Reginald's Tower is a historic tower in Waterford, Munster, Ireland.

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Regional Museum in Szczecinek

The Regional Museum in Szczecinek Poland was founded in 1914.

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Regional Museum of local lore of Mykolaiv

The Regional Museum of local lore of Mykolaiv is one of the oldest museums in Ukraine.

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Rehweiler

Rehweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce

The Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce (Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg or ERR) was a Nazi Party organization dedicated to appropriating cultural property during the Second World War.

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Reichweiler

Reichweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Reideen

is a Japanese animated television series remake of the 1975 Super Robot anime Brave Raideen.

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Reimar Schefold

Reimar Schefold (born February 8, 1938, Basel, Switzerland), is professor emeritus of cultural anthropology and sociology of Indonesia at Leiden University.

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Reims Gospel

Reims Gospel (French: Texte du Sacre which means "coronation text"; also referred to in some Czech sources as the Sázava Gospel or Remešský kodex) is a richly illustrated manuscript of Slavonic origin which became part of the Reims Cathedral treasury.

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Reinhard Maack

Reinhard Maack (2 October 1892 in Herford – 26 August 1969 in Curitiba) was a German explorer, geologist and geographer.

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Relationship (archaeology)

An archaeological relationship is the position in space and by implication, in time, of an object or context with respect to another.

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Relative dating

Relative dating is the science of determining the relative order of past events (i.e., the age of an object in comparison to another), without necessarily determining their absolute age, (i.e. estimated age).

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Relic Hunter

Relic Hunter is a Canadian television series, starring Tia Carrere and Christien Anholt.

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Relics of Sariputta and Moggallana

Sariputra and Mahamoggallana were the two chief disciples of Gautama Buddha, and died within two weeks of one another, after which they were cremated and their relics kept.

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Religion and ritual of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture

The study of religion and ritual of the Cucuteni-Trypillia culture has provided important insights into the early history of Europe.

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Religion in pre-colonial Philippines

The nature of religion in the pre-colonial Philippines is often unclear.

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Religious abuse

Religious abuse is abuse administered under the guise of religion, including harassment or humiliation, which may result in psychological trauma.

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Religious aspects of Nazism

Historians, political scientists and philosophers have studied Nazism with a specific focus on its religious and pseudo-religious aspects.

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Religious initiation rites

Many cultures practice or have practiced initiation rites, including the ancient Greeks, the Hebraic/Jewish, the Babylonian, the Mayan, and the Norse cultures.

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Relsberg

Relsberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Remembrances of the Mountain Meadows massacre

There have been several remembrances of the Mountain Meadows massacre including: commemorative observances, the building of monuments and markers, and the creation of associations and other groups to help promote the massacre's history and ensure protection of the massacre site and grave sites.

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Remote sensing (archaeology)

Remote sensing techniques in archaeology are an increasingly important component of the technical and methodological tool set available in archaeological research.

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Rempstone Stone Circle

Rempstone Stone Circle is a stone circle located near to Corfe Castle on the Isle of Purbeck in the south-western English county of Dorset.

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René Dussaud

René Dussaud (December 24, 1868 – March 17, 1958) was a French Orientalist, archaeologist, and epigrapher.

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Repatriation and reburial of human remains

The repatriation and reburial of human remains is a current debate in archaeology.

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Reports and Transactions, Cardiff Naturalists' Society

Reports and Transactions of the Cardiff Naturalists' Society was an annual scientific journal published by the Cardiff Naturalists' Society, containing scholarly articles on geology, archaeology, natural history, and meteorology, as well as book reviews and society notes.

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Requiem Chevalier Vampire

Requiem Chevalier Vampire (French for Requiem Vampire Knight) was a Franco-British comic, published by Nickel Editions.

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Rerikhism

Rerikhism or Roerichism (Russian: Рерихи́зм, Рерихиа́нство, Ре́риховское движе́ние) is a spiritual and cultural movement centered on the teachings transmitted by Helena and Nicholas Roerich.

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Rescue (disambiguation)

Rescue refers to operations that usually involve the saving of life, or prevention of additional injury.

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Rescue archaeology

Rescue archaeology, sometimes called preventive archaeology, salvage archaeology, commercial archaeology, contract archaeology, or compliance archaeology, is state-sanctioned, for-profit archaeological survey and excavation carried out in advance of construction or other land development.

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Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art

The Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art (RLAHA) is a laboratory at the University of Oxford, England which develops and applies scientific methods to the study of the past.

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Retail

Retail is the process of selling consumer goods or services to customers through multiple channels of distribution to earn a profit.

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Retrodiction

Retrodiction (also known as postdiction—although this should not be confused with the use of the term in criticisms of parapsychological research) is the act of making a "prediction" about the past.

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Return to Zork

Return to Zork is a 1993 graphic adventure game in the Zork series.

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Reub Long

Reuben Aaron Long (26 January 1898 – 28 July 1974) was an Eastern Oregon rancher, author, and story teller.

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Reuben Kadish

Reuben Kadish (January 29, 1913 – September 20, 1992) was an American artist, specializing as a sculptor, draughtsman, muralist, painter, and printmaker.

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Reverie, Tennessee

Reverie is an unincorporated community in Tipton County, Tennessee, United States.

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Revista Austral de Ciencias Sociales

Revista Austral de Ciencias Sociales is a biannual peer-reviewed academic journal specialising in social science, including fields such as history and archaeology.

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Revue d'Égyptologie

The Revue d'Égyptologie (RdE) is a scholarly journal published annually by the Société Française d'Égyptologie with the support of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the Centre national du livre.

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Revue du Nord

The Revue du Nord is a peer-reviewed academic journal of history and archaeology published by the joint universities of Northern France.

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Reykjavík 871±2

The Settlement Exhibition Reykjavík 871 +/- 2 is an exhibition on the settlement of Reykjavík, Iceland, created by the Reykjavik City Museum.

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Rhaunen

Rhaunen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Rhea Galanaki

Rea Galanaki (Ρέα Γαλανάκη) is a Greek author who was born in Heraklion, Crete in 1947.

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Rheinböllen

Rheinböllen is a town in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Rhizon

Rhizon (Illyrian: Rhizon; Ῥίζων; Risinium) was an ancient settlement located near today's Risan in the Bay of Kotor, Montenegro.

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Rhodope Mountains

The Rhodopes (Родопи, Rodopi; Ροδόπη, Rodopi; Rodoplar) are a mountain range in Southeastern Europe, with over 83% of its area in southern Bulgaria and the remainder in Greece.

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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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Rhythms Monthly

Rhythms Monthly (Chinese: 經典雜誌) is a Chinese language geographic magazine based in Taipei, Taiwan.

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Ricardo Alegría

Ricardo E. Alegría Gallardo (April 14, 1921 – July 7, 2011) was a Puerto Rican scholar, cultural anthropologist and archeologist known as the "father of modern Puerto Rican archaeology".

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Ricardo E. Latcham

Ricardo Eduardo Latcham Cartwright (Bristol, England, March 5, 1869 - Santiago, Chile, October 16, 1943) was an archaeologist, ethnologist, folklore scholar and teacher.

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Ricardo Velázquez Bosco

Ricardo Velázquez Bosco (Burgos 1843 – Madrid 1923) was a Spanish architect, archaeologist and scholar.

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Richard Ambler

Richard Penry Ambler (26 May 1933 – 27 December 2013) was an English molecular biologist who conducted groundbreaking research into the evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

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Richard Blanton

Richard E. Blanton (born November 16, 1943) is an American anthropologist, archaeologist, and academic.

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Richard Bohn

Karl Theodor Richard Bohn (29 December 1849 – 22 August 1898 in Görlitz) was a German archaeological architect born in Berlin.

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Richard Bradley (archaeologist)

Richard John Bradley, (born 18 November 1946) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Richard Caton

Richard Caton (1842, Bradford – 1926), of Liverpool, England, was a British physician, physiologist and Lord Mayor of Liverpool who was crucial in discovering the electrical nature of the brain and laid the groundwork for Hans Berger to discover Alpha wave activity in the human brain.

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Richard D. Hansen

Richard D. Hansen is a distinguished American archaeologist and currently Adjunct Professor of Anthropology at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

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Richard Daugherty

Richard Deo Daugherty (March 31, 1922 – February 22, 2014) was an American archaeologist and professor, who led the excavation of the Ozette Indian Village Archeological Site in Washington state during the 1970s.

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Richard Delbrück

Richard Delbrück (14 July 1875, Jena – 22 August 1957, Bonn) was a German classical archaeologist who specialized in the field of ancient Roman portraiture.

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Richard Diehl

Richard A. Diehl (born 1940) is an American archaeologist, anthropologist and academic, noted as a scholar of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures.

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Richard Edmonds (scientist)

Richard Edmonds (18 September 1801 – 12 March 1886) was a notable British scientific writer of the Victorian period.

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Richard Ernest Wycherley

Richard Ernest Wycherley (February 18, 1909 – April 26, 1986), was a classical archaeologist, specializing in ancient Greece.

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Richard H. Wilkinson

Richard H. Wilkinson (born 1951) is an archaeologist in the field of Egyptology.

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Richard Hodges (archaeologist)

Richard Hodges OBE, FSA (born 29 September 1952) is a British archaeologist and president of The American University of Rome.

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Richard Indreko

Richard Indreko (in Puiatu, Purdi parish, Järvamaa – 10 March 1961 in Stockholm) was an Estonian historian and archaeologist.

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Richard J. C. Atkinson

Richard John Copland Atkinson CBE (22 January 1920 – 10 October 1994) was a British prehistorian and archaeologist.

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Richard J. Harrison

Richard John Harrison (born August 1949) is an archaeologist and Professor in the University of Bristol, England.

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Richard J. Pearson

Richard Joseph Pearson (born May 2, 1938) is a Canadian archaeologist.

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Richard L. Burger

Richard Lewis Burger (born 1950), PhD (UC Berkeley 1978), is an American archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Richard Lane (architect)

Richard Lane (3 April 1795 – 25 May 1880) was a distinguished English architect of the early and mid-19th century.

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Richard Leakey

Richard Erskine Frere Leakey FRS (born 19 December 1944) is a Kenyan paleoanthropologist, conservationist, and politician.

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Richard Lobban

Richard A. Lobban, Jr., husband of Dr.

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Richard MacNeish

Richard Stockton MacNeish (April 29, 1918 – January 16, 2001), known to many as "Scotty", was an American archaeologist.

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Richard Miles (historian)

Richard Miles (born in Pembury, Kent, 1969) is a British historian and archaeologist, best known for presenting two major historical documentary series: BBC2's Ancient Worlds (2010), which presented a comprehensive overview of classical history and the dawn of civilisation, and BBC Four's Archaeology: a Secret History (2013).

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Richard Morris (archaeologist)

Richard K. Morris, OBE (born 8 October 1947) is an English archaeologist and historian who specializes in the study of churchyard and battlefield archaeology.

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Richard Payne Knight

(Richard) Payne Knight (11 February 1751 – 23 April 1824) of Downton Castle in Herefordshire, and of 5 Soho Square,History of Parliament biography London, England, was a classical scholar, connoisseur, archaeologist and numismatist best known for his theories of picturesque beauty and for his interest in ancient phallic imagery.

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Richard Schöne

Richard Schöne (5 February 1840, in Dresden – 5 March 1922, in Berlin-Grunewald) was a German archaeologist and classical philologist.

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Richard Tangye

Sir Richard Trevithick Tangye (24 November 1833 – 14 October 1906) was a British manufacturer of engines and other heavy equipment.

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Richard Thomas (civil engineer)

Richard Thomas (27 December 1779 – 21 February 1858) was an English civil engineer.

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Richard Trevithick

Richard Trevithick (13 April 1771 – 22 April 1833) was a British inventor and mining engineer from Cornwall, England.

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Richard Walter (archaeologist)

Richard K. Walter is a New Zealand archaeologist who specializes in the archaeology of the tropical Pacific and New Zealand.

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Rick Brant

Rick Brant is the central character in a series of 24 adventure and mystery novels by John Blaine, a pseudonym for authors Harold L. Goodwin (all titles) and Peter J. Harkins (co-author of the first three).

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Riddle Ranch

The Riddle Brothers Ranch is a pioneer ranch complex located in the in Harney County in eastern Oregon, United States.

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Ridge and furrow

Ridge and furrow is an archaeological pattern of ridges (Medieval Latin sliones) and troughs created by a system of ploughing used in Europe during the Middle Ages, typical of the open field system.

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Ridgecrest, California

Ridgecrest is a city in Kern County, California, United States.

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Ridgeway Hill Viking burial pit

The Ridgeway Hill Viking burial pit at Ridgeway Hill near Weymouth, Dorset, was a mass grave of 54 skeletons and 51 heads of Scandinavian men executed some time between AD 970 and 1025.

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Rigmor and Carl Holst-Knudsen Award for Scientific Research

The Rigmor and Carl Holst-Knudsen Award for Scientific Research is one of Denmark's oldest and most prestigious science prizes.

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Rijksmuseum van Oudheden

The Rijksmuseum van Oudheden (English: National Museum of Antiquities) is the national archaeological museum of the Netherlands.

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Rinaghju

Rinaghju (Renaju) is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Rindge, New Hampshire

Rindge is a town in Cheshire County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Rindos affair

The Rindos affair was an academic scandal that occurred at the University of Western Australia.

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Ring ditch

In archaeology, a ring ditch is a trench of circular or penannular plan, cut into bedrock.

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Ring of Brodgar

The Ring of Brodgar (or Brogar, or Ring o' Brodgar) is a Neolithic henge and stone circle about 6 miles north-east of Stromness on the Mainland, the largest island in Orkney, Scotland.

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Ringmoor

The Ringmoor Settlement is an Iron Age/Romano-British farming settlement in Dorset, to the north of Turnworth and the south of Belchalwell in the Blackmore Vale.

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Rinkenwall

The Rinkenwall or Rinkenmauer is a circular rampart fortification at the southeastern tip of the Rinkenkopf mountain above the Murg valley near the village of Baiersbronn in the county of Freudenstadt in the south German state of Baden-Württemberg.

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Ripley P. Bullen

Ripley Pierce Bullen (1902–1976) was Curator Emeritus at the Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida, where he was the Department Chair of Social Sciences for a period of seventeen years (1956–1973).

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Rise of Rome

The rise of Rome to dominate the overt politics of Europe, North Africa and the Near East completely from the 1st century BC to the 4th century AD, is the subject of a great deal of analysis by historians, military strategists, political scientists, and increasingly also some economists.

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Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider is an action-adventure video game developed by Crystal Dynamics.

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Riserva naturale dello Zingaro

Riserva naturale dello zingaro was the first natural reserve set up in Sicily in May 1981, located almost completely in the municipal territory of San Vito Lo Capo.

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Risks to the Glen Canyon Dam

Glen Canyon Dam, a concrete arch dam on the Colorado River in the American state of Arizona, has been associated with a large amount of risk, most notably the risk of its siltation and failure.

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Rissne

Rissne is a neighborhood in the western part of Sundbyberg Municipality, Stockholm, Sweden.

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Rita Grosse-Ruyken

Rita Maria Walburga Grosse-Ruyken (born 29 November 1948) is a contemporary German artist, sculptor, multimedia installation art, artfilm and performance, producer artist and member of the Association of German Artists Deutscher Kuenstlerbund.

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Rites of the Gods

Rites of the Gods is an archaeological study of religious belief and ritual practices across prehistoric Britain from the Old Stone Age through to the Iron Age.

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Ritual and Domestic Life in Prehistoric Europe

Ritual and Domestic Life in Prehistoric Europe is a book by the English archaeologist Richard Bradley of the University of Reading.

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Rivanna River

The Rivanna River is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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River Cart

The River Cart (Cart) is a tributary of the River Clyde, Scotland, which it joins from the west roughly midway between the towns of Erskine and Renfrew and opposite the town of Clydebank.

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River Conwy

The River Conwy (Afon Conwy) is a river in north Wales.

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River Elwy

The River Elwy (Afon Elwy in Welsh) is a river in Wales and is a tributary of the River Clwyd.

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River Ver

The Ver is a river in Hertfordshire, England.

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Rivet

A rivet is a permanent mechanical fastener.

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Riviera Maya

The Riviera Maya is a tourism and resort district in Mexico.

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Rizal Park

Rizal Park (Liwasang Rizal, Parque Rizal), also known as Luneta Park or simply Luneta, is a historical urban park in the Philippines.

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RMIT Melbourne City campus

The Melbourne City campus of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT University) is located in the city centre of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia.

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RMN Newsletter

RMN Newsletter is a peer-reviewed and open access academic journal published on a bi-annual basis by the University of Helsinki’s Department of Folklore Studies.

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RMS Laconia (1911)

RMS Laconia was a Cunard ocean liner built by Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson, launched on 27 July 1911, with the wife of the U.S. Ambassador Mrs.

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Roald H. Fryxell

Roald H. Fryxell (February 18, 1934 – May 18, 1974) was an American educator, geologist and archaeologist.

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Roanne

Roanne (Rouana in Arpitan) is a commune in the Loire department in central France.

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Roanoke Colony

The Roanoke Colony, also known as the Lost Colony, was established in 1585 on Roanoke Island in what is today's Dare County, North Carolina.

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Roanoke Island

Roanoke Island is an island in Dare County on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, United States.

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Robert Abbe

Robert Abbe (April 13, 1851 – March 7, 1928) was an American surgeon and pioneer radiologist in New York City.

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Robert Ardrey

Robert Ardrey (October 16, 1908 – January 14, 1980) was an American playwright, screenwriter and science writer perhaps best known for The Territorial Imperative (1966).

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Robert Bagley

Robert Bagley is a professor of Chinese art history and archaeology in the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University.

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Robert Bollt

Robert Bollt (26 August 1971 – 26 January 2010) was an American archaeologist, specializing in Pacific Archaeology.

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Robert Bruce Foote

Robert Bruce Foote (22 September 1834 – 29 December 1912) was a British geologist and archaeologist who conducted geological surveys of prehistoric locations in India for the Geological Survey of India.

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Robert Carl Suggs

Robert Carl Suggs (born 1932) is an American archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Robert Corruccini

Robert Spencer Corruccini (born May 21, 1949) is an American anthropologist, distinguished professor, Smithsonian Institution Research Fellow, Human Biology Council Fellow (now the Human Biology Association), and the 1994 Outstanding Scholar at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale.

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Robert Drennan

Robert D. Drennan is an archaeologist who specializes in the development of sociopolitical complexity for prehistoric societies.

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Robert Drury (sailor)

Robert Drury (born 1687; died between 1743 and 1750) was an English sailor on the Degrave who was shipwrecked at the age of 17 on the island of Madagascar.

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Robert E. Bell

Robert E. Bell (1914 – January 1, 2006), was an archaeologist.

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Robert E. Lee Chadwick

Robert E. Lee Chadwick (March 29, 1930 – January 3, 2014) was an American anthropologist and archeologist, primarily known for his contributions to the.

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Robert E. M. Hedges

Robert Ernest Mortimer Hedges is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Robert Eisenman

Robert Eisenman (born 1937) is an American biblical scholar, theoretical writer, historian, archaeologist, and "road" poet.

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Robert Fagan

Robert Fagan (c. 1761 – 26 August 1816) was a painter, diplomat and archaeologist.

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Robert Fletcher (costume designer)

Robert Fletcher (born August 23, 1922) is a costume and set designer.

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Robert Foley (academic)

Robert Andrew Foley, FBA (born 18 March 1953) is a British anthropologist, archaeologist, and academic, specialising in human evolution.

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Robert G. Bednarik

Robert G. Bednarik (born 6 April 1944 in Vienna) is an Australian prehistorian and cognitive archeologist.

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Robert Garrett

Robert Garrett (May 24, 1875 – April 25, 1961) was an American athlete.

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Robert Hamilton (archaeologist)

Robert William Hamilton, FBA (26 November 1905 – 25 September 1995) was a British archaeologist and academic.

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Robert Hamilton Mathews

Robert Hamilton Mathews (1841–1918) was an Australian surveyor and self-taught anthropologist who studied the Aboriginal cultures of Australia, especially those of Victoria, New South Wales and southern Queensland.

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Robert Hardy

Timothy Sydney Robert Hardy, CBE, FSA (29 October 1925 – 3 August 2017) was an English actor who had a long career in the theatre, film and television.

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Robert Heizer

Robert Fleming Heizer (July 13, 1915 – July 18, 1979) was an archaeologist who conducted extensive fieldwork and reporting in California, the Southwestern United States, and the Great Basin.

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Robert Jacobus Forbes

Robert Jacobus Forbes or Robert James Forbes (21 April 1900, Breda – 13 January 1973, Haarlem) was a Dutch chemist and historian of science and professor in the history of applied science and technology at the University of Amsterdam.

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Robert John Braidwood

Robert John Braidwood (29 July 1907 – 15 January 2003) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist, one of the founders of scientific archaeology, and a leader in the field of Near Eastern Prehistory.

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Robert Keith (historian)

Bishop Robert Keith (1681–1757) was a Scottish Episcopal bishop and historian.

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Robert Koldewey

Robert Johann Koldewey (10 September 1855 – 4 February 1925) was a German archaeologist, famous for his in-depth excavation of the ancient city of Babylon in modern-day Iraq.

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Robert Krampf

John Robert Krampf (born September 5, 1956 in Memphis, Tennessee), also known as "The Happy Scientist", is a science educator known for traveling the United States with his entertaining and informative science shows for the last 25 years.

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Robert L. Hall

Robert L. Hall (February 8, 1927 – March 16, 2012) was an American anthropologist.

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Robert L. Kelly

Robert Laurens Kelly (born March 16, 1957) is an American anthropologist who is a Professor at the University of Wyoming.

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Robert McCormick Adams Jr.

Robert McCormick Adams Jr. (July 23, 1926 – January 27, 2018) was a U.S. anthropologist and Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution (1984-94).

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Robert McGhee (archaeologist)

Robert John McGhee (born 1941) is a Canadian archaeologist and author specializing in the archaeology of the Arctic.

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Robert Merrillees

Robert S. Merrillees (born 1938) is a former Australian diplomat and archaeologist.

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Robert Mond

Sir Robert Ludwig Mond, FRS, FRSE (9 September 1867 – 22 October 1938) was a British chemist and archaeologist.

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Robert Morkot

Robert George Morkot, FSA (born 1957) is an archaeologist and academic, specialising in Ancient Egypt.

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Robert Morris (financier)

Robert Morris, Jr. (January 20, 1734 – May 8, 1806), a Founding Father of the United States, was an English-born American merchant who financed the American Revolution, oversaw the striking of the first coins of the United States, and signed the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, and the United States Constitution.

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Robert Munro (archaeologist)

Dr Robert Munro FRSE FSA LLD (1835-1920) was a Scottish physician and noted amateur archaeologist.

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Robert Pashley

Robert Pashley (4 September 1805 – 29 May 1859) was a 19th-century English traveller and economist.

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Robert Plot

Robert Plot (13 December 1640 – 30 April 1696) was an English naturalist, first Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford, and the first keeper of the Ashmolean Museum.

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Robert Proctor (bibliographer)

Robert George Collier Proctor (13 May 1868 – 6 September 1903) was an English bibliographer, librarian, book collector, and expert on incunabula and early typography.

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Robert Redfield

Robert Redfield (December 4, 1897 – October 16, 1958) was an American anthropologist and ethnolinguist, whose ethnographic work in Tepoztlán, Mexico is considered a landmark Latin American ethnography.

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Robert Sharer

Robert J. Sharer (1940–2012) was an American archaeologist, academic and Mayanist researcher.

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Robert Sténuit

Robert Pierre André Sténuit (born 1933 in Brussels) is a Belgian journalist, writer, and underwater archeologist.

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Robert Summers (artist)

Robert Temple Summers II, is an American artist, (born August 13, 1940) in Cleburne, Texas.

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Robert Sutton Harrington

Robert Sutton Harrington (October 21, 1942 – January 23, 1993) was an American astronomer who worked at the United States Naval Observatory (USNO).

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Robert von Schneider

Robert von Schneider (17 November 1854, Vienna – 24 October 1909, Vienna) was an Austrian classical archaeologist.

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Robert Walsh (Irish writer)

The Rev.

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Robert Wauchope (archaeologist)

Robert Wauchope (December 10, 1909 – January 20, 1979) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist, whose academic research specialized in the prehistory and archaeology of Latin America, Mesoamerica, and the Southwestern United States.

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Roberta Frank

Roberta Frank (born 1941 in New York City) is a philologist specializing in Old English and Old Norse language and literature.

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Roberta Gilchrist

Roberta Lynn Gilchrist, FSA, FBA (born 28 June 1965) is a Canadian-born archaeologist and academic specialising in the medieval period, whose career has been spent in the United Kingdom.

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Robin Boast

Robin Boast (born 2 March 1956) is the Professor of Information Science and Culture at the University of Amsterdam, Department of Media Studies.

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Robin Bush

Robin James Edwin Bush (12 March 1943 – 22 June 2010) was the resident historian for the first nine series of Channel 4's archaeology series Time Team, appearing in 39 episodes between 1994 and 2003.

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Robin Coningham

Robin Andrew Evelyn Coningham (born 2 December 1965) is a British archaeologist and academic, specialising in South Asian archaeology and archaeological ethics.

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Robin Dennell

Robin Dennell (born 1947) is a British prehistoric archaeologist specialising in early hominin expansions out of Africa and the Palaeolithic of Pakistan and China.

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Robin Heath

Robin F. Heath (born 8 May 1948) is a British author and teacher of astrology.

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Robot Wars (film)

Robot Wars is a 1993 American cyberpunk film directed by Albert Band and written by Charles Band and Jackson Barr.

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Roca dels Bous (archaeological site)

Roca dels Bous (Catalan: "Bull's Rock") is a Middle Paleolithic site located in Sant Llorenç de Montgai, in the Catalan Pyrenees, Spain.

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Rochereil

Rochereil is a prehistoric cave near Lisle in the French département Dordogne.

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Rock art

In archaeology, rock art is human-made markings placed on natural stone; it is largely synonymous with parietal art.

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Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe

Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe: Signing the Land is an archaeological book authored by the English academic Richard Bradley of the University of Reading.

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Rock art in Europe

Rock art has been produced in Europe since the Upper Palaeolithic era through to recent centuries.

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Rock Eagle

Rock Eagle Effigy Mound is an archaeological site in Putnam County, Georgia, U.S. estimated to have been constructed c. 1000 BC to AD 1000 (1,000 to 3,000 years ago).

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Rock gong

A rock gong is a lithophone.

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Rock Mound Archeological Site

The Rock Mound Archeological Site is an archaeological site in Key Largo, Florida.

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Rock shelter

A rock shelter — also rockhouse, crepuscular cave, bluff shelter, or abri — is a shallow cave-like opening at the base of a bluff or cliff.

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Rockefeller Museum

The Rockefeller Museum, formerly the Palestine Archaeological Museum, is an archaeology museum located in East Jerusalem that houses a large collection of artifacts unearthed in the excavations conducted in Mandate Palestine, in the 1920s and 1930s.

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Rockland Community College

Rockland Community College is a community college in Ramapo, New York.

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Rockville, Maryland

Rockville is a city and the county seat of Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, part of the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area.

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Roderic

Ruderic (also spelled Roderic, Roderik, Roderich, or Roderick; Spanish and Rodrigo, لذريق; died 711 or 712) was the Visigothic King of Hispania for a brief period between 710 and 712.

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Roderick Gordon

Roderick Gordon (born November 1960) is the author of Tunnels, a bestselling children's book and the first book in the Tunnels series by Roderick Gordon and Brian Williams.

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Roderick Sprague

Roderick Sprague III (February 18, 1933 – August 20, 2012) was an American anthropologist, ethnohistorian and historical archaeologist, and the Emeritus Director of the Laboratory of Anthropology at the University of Idaho in Moscow, where he taught for thirty years.

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Rodney Collin

Rodney Collin (26 April 1909 – 3 May 1956) was a British writer in the area of spiritual development.

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Rodney Young (archaeologist)

Rodney Stuart Young (born August 1, 1907, in Bernardsville, New Jersey, – died October 25, 1974, in Chester Springs, Pennsylvania) was an American Near Eastern archaeologist.

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Rodolfo Casamiquela

Rodolfo Magín Casamiquela (Ingeniero Jacobacci, Río Negro Province, December 11, 1932 – Cipolletti, Río Negro, December 5, 2008) was an Argentinian paleontologist, archeologist, historian, writer, and teacher, best known for his discovering of the dinosaur ''Pisanosaurus mertii'' in 1967.

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Rodolfo Lanciani

Rodolfo Amedeo Lanciani (1 January 1845 – 22 May 1929) was an Italian archaeologist, a pioneering student of ancient Roman topography, and among his many excavations was that of the House of the Vestals in the Roman Forum.

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Rodrigo Caro

Rodrigo Caro (Utrera, 1573 – Seville, August 10, 1647) was a Spanish priest, historian, archeologist, lawyer, poet and writer.

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Roger Blonder

Roger Blonder is an independent animator and educator born in 1967 in Los Angeles, California.

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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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Roger Curtis Green

Roger Curtis Green, ONZM (15 March 1932 – 4 October 2009) was an American born, New Zealand-based archaeologist, Professor Emeritus at The University of Auckland, and member of the National Academy of Sciences and Royal Society of New Zealand.

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Roger Hammond (actor)

John Roger Hammond (21 March 1936 – 8 November 2012) was an English character actor who appeared in many films and television series.

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Roger Mercer

Professor Roger J Mercer is a British archaeologist whose work has concentrated on the Neolithic and Bronze Age of the British Isles.

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Roger Summers

Roger Summers (1907-2003) was a Zimbabwean archaeologist, who worked for the National Museums and Monuments Commission from 1947 - 1970 and was described as "a major influence in the formative years of Zimbabwean, then.

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Rogue Angel

Rogue Angel is a paperback series of novels produced bi-monthly since July 2006 by Harlequin Enterprises, published under a succession of imprints and written under the house name of "Alex Archer".

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Rohrbach, Birkenfeld

is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Roland A. Steiner

Roland A. Steiner (ca. 1840 - January 12, 1906) was a physician, planter, folklorist, and amateur archaeologist who resided in Georgia for most of his life.

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Roland de Mecquenem (archaeologist)

Roland de Mecquenem (20 August 1877 – 1957) was a French archaeologist who took part in the excavations of Susa in Iran.

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Rolf Hachmann

Rolf Hachmann (19 June 1917 – 5 June 2014) was a German archaeologist who specialized in pre- and protohistory.

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Rolfe D. Mandel

Rolfe D. Mandel (born August 25, 1952) is a Distinguished Professor of archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Kansas as well as Senior Scientist and Executive Director of the Odyssey Geoarchaeological Research Program at the Kansas Geological Survey.

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Rollins Pass

Rollins Pass, elevation, is a mountain pass and active archaeological siteLaBelle, Jason M. & Pelton, Spencer R. "Communal hunting along the Continental Divide of Northern Colorado: Results from the Olson game drive (5BL147)", 2013 in the Southern Rocky Mountains of north-central Colorado in the United States.

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Rollot

Rollot is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.

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Rollright Stones

The Rollright Stones is a complex of three Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monuments near the village of Long Compton, on the borders of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire.

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Roman Academies

Roman academies includes a description of Papal academies in Rome including historical and bibliographical notes concerning the more important of these.

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Roman Baths, Beirut

Roman Berytus (Roman Baths) are located in the middle of downtown Beirut, Lebanon between Banks Street and Capuchin Street.

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Roman Britain

Roman Britain (Britannia or, later, Britanniae, "the Britains") was the area of the island of Great Britain that was governed by the Roman Empire, from 43 to 410 AD.

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Roman fort, Mušov

The Roman fort (římská pevnost), also known as Burgstall and Hradisko, is an archaeological site located in Mušov, Czech Republic, of a Roman army camp on the Dyje-Svratka-Jihlava confluence.

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Roman Ghirshman

Roman Ghirshman (Roman Mikhailovich Girshman; October 3, 1895 – 5 September 1979) was a Russian-born French archeologist who specialized in ancient Persia.

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Roman imperial period (chronology)

The Roman imperial period is a term used for chronology in both historiography and archaeology of Europe.

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Roman metallurgy

Metals and metal working had been known to the people of modern Italy since the Bronze Age.

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Roman ruins of São Cucufate

The Roman ruins of São Cucufate (or alternately, the Roman ruins of the Villa of São Cucufate, Ruins of Santiago, Archaeological ruins of São Cucufate or Roman villa of São Áulica) is a Romanesque archaeological site, located on the ruins of a Roman-era agricultural farm in the civil parish of Vila de Frades, in the municipality of Vidigueira, in the southern Alentejo, Portugal.

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Roman technology

Roman technology is the engineering practice which supported Roman civilization and made the expansion of Roman commerce and Roman military possible for over a millennium (753 BC–476 AD).

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Romanization (cultural)

Romanization or Latinization (or Romanisation or Latinisation), in the historical and cultural meanings of both terms, indicate different historical processes, such as acculturation, integration and assimilation of newly incorporated and peripheral populations by the Roman Republic and the later Roman Empire.

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Romano-Germanic Central Museum (Mainz)

The Romano-Germanic Central Museum (Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum (RGZM)) is an archaeological and historical research institution for pre-history and early history headquartered in Mainz.

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Romano-Germanic Museum

The Roman-Germanic Museum (RGM, in German: Römisch-Germanisches Museum) is an archaeological museum in Cologne, Germany.

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Rome

Rome (Roma; Roma) is the capital city of Italy and a special comune (named Comune di Roma Capitale).

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Rome, Georgia

Rome is the largest city in and the county seat of Floyd County, Georgia, United States.

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Ron Vanderwal

Ron Vanderwal (born 1938).

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Ronald F. Tylecote

Ronald Frank Tylecote (15 June 1916 – 17 June 1990) was a British archaeologist and metallurgist, generally recognised as the founder of the sub-discipline of archaeometallurgy.

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Ronald Hutton

Ronald Hutton (born 1953) is an English historian who specialises in the study of Early Modern Britain, British folklore, pre-Christian religion and contemporary Paganism.

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Ronald Montagu Burrows

Ronald Montagu Burrows (16 August 1867 – 14 May 1920) was a British academic archaeologist who served as Principal of King's College London from 1913 to 1920.

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Ronald Spores

Ronald M. Spores (born January 25, 1931) is an American academic anthropologist, archaeologist and ethnohistorian, whose research career has centered on the pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica.

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Rondane National Park

Rondane National Park (Rondane nasjonalpark) is the oldest national park in Norway, established on 21 December 1962.

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Ronny Reich

Ronny Reich (born 1947) is an Israeli archaeologist, excavator and scholar of the ancient remains of Jerusalem.

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Rookery Mound

The Rookery Mound is an archaeological site near Everglades City, Florida.

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Roosevelt Red Ware

Roosevelt Red Ware, also known as Salado Red Ware and Salado Polychrome, is a late prehistoric pottery tradition found across large portions of Arizona and New Mexico.

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Roscoe Wilmeth

Roscoe Hall Wilmeth (April 17, 1922 - August 19, 1981) was an American archaeologist who was born in St. Marys, Pennsylvania.

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Rosemary Cramp

Dame Rosemary Jean Cramp, (born 6 May 1929) is a British archaeologist and academic specialising in the Anglo-Saxons.

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Rosemary Joyce

Rosemary Joyce (born 1956) is an American anthropologist and social archaeologist who has specialized in research in Honduras.

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Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science

The Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (RSMAS) is a academic and research institution for the study of oceanography and the atmospheric sciences within the University of Miami (UM).

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Rosette (design)

A rosette is a round, stylized flower design.

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Rosewell (plantation)

Rosewell Plantation in Gloucester County, Virginia, was for more than 100 years the home of a branch of the Page family, one of the First Families of Virginia.

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Rotes Rathaus (Berlin U-Bahn)

Rotes Rathaus is a subway station under construction in Berlin's Mitte district.

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Rothselberg

Rothselberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Rotselaar

Rotselaar is a municipality located in the Belgian province of Flemish-Brabant, near the convergence of the Demer and the Dijle.

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Roubaix

Roubaix is a city in Northern France, located in the Lille metropolitan area.

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Rouffignac Cave

The Rouffignac cave, in the French commune of Rouffignac-Saint-Cernin-de-Reilhac in the Dordogne département, contains over 250 engravings and cave paintings dating back to the Upper Paleolithic.

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Roundpole fence

The roundpole fence is a wooden fence typical to the countryside in Sweden (in Swedish: gärdesgård), Norway (in Norwegian: skigard), Finland (in Finnish: riukuaita, risuaita or pistoaita) and Estonia (in Estonian: roigasaed or teivasaed).

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Rousay

Rousay (Hrólfsey meaning Rolf's Island) is a small, hilly island about north of Mainland, the largest island in the Orkney Islands of Scotland, and has been nicknamed "the Egypt of the north", due to its archaeological diversity and importance.

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Rowing Blazers

Rowing Blazers is American clothing brand founded by Jack Carlson, a former member of the United States national rowing team and the author of the book "Rowing Blazers".

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Rowland Parker

Rowland Parker (1912 - 1989) was an author and social historian.

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Roy and Lesley Adkins

Roy and Lesley Adkins are writers and archaeologists.

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Roy Emile Gereau

Roy Emile Gereau (born 1947) is an American botanist and explorer.

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Roy Mata

Roimata was a powerful 13th century Melanesian chief from what is now Vanuatu.

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Roy Whiting

Roy William Whiting (born 26 January 1959) is an English convicted child killer, from West Sussex.

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Roya Arab

Roya Arab (born 1967, in Tehran, Iran) is a UK-based Iranian musician and archaeologist.

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Royal Albert Memorial Museum

Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery (RAMM) is a museum and art gallery in Exeter, Devon, the largest in the city.

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Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland

The Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (RAI) is a long-established anthropological organisation, with a global membership.

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Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland

The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS) was an executive non-departmental public body of the Scottish Government, which was "sponsored" through Historic Scotland, an executive agency of the Scottish Government.

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Royal Grammar School, Newcastle upon Tyne

Royal Grammar School, Newcastle upon Tyne, usually abbreviated as RGS, is a selective British independent school for pupils aged between 7 and 18 years.

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Royal Irish Academy

The Royal Irish Academy (RIA) (Acadamh Ríoga na hÉireann), based in Dublin, is an all-Ireland independent academic body that promotes study and excellence in the sciences, and humanities and social sciences.

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Royal Military College of Canada

The Royal Military College of Canada (Collège militaire royal du Canada), commonly abbreviated as RMCC or RMC, is the military college of the Canadian Armed Forces, and is a degree-granting university training military officers.

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Royal Museum for Central Africa

The Royal Museum for Central Africa or RMCA (Koninklijk Museum voor Midden-Afrika or KMMA; Musée royal de l'Afrique centrale or MRAC), colloquially known as the Africa Museum, is an ethnography and natural history museum situated in Tervuren in Flemish Brabant, Belgium, just outside Brussels.

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Royal Ontario Museum

The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM, Musée royal de l'Ontario) is a museum of art, world culture and natural history in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Royal Palace of Oba of Benin

The Royal Palace of Oba of Benin is a UNESCO listed heritage site.

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Royal Road

The Royal Road was an ancient highway, part of the Silk Road and the Uttara Path built in ancient South Asia and Central Asia, reorganized and rebuilt by the Persian king Darius the Great (Darius I) of the first (Achaemenid) Persian Empire in the 5th century BCE.

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Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland

The Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland is a learned society based in Ireland, whose aims are "to preserve, examine and illustrate all ancient monuments and memorials of the arts, manners and customs of the past, as connected with the antiquities, language, literature and history of Ireland".

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Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala

The Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala (Swedish Kungliga Vetenskaps-Societeten i Uppsala), is the oldest of the royal academies in Sweden.

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Royal Society of Thailand

The Royal Society of Thailand (ราชบัณฑิตยสภา), formerly known as the Royal Society of Siam, is the national academy of Thailand in charge of academic works of the government.

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Royston Cave

Royston Cave is a small artificial cave located in Katherine's Yard, Melbourn Street, Royston, England.

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RPM Nautical Foundation

RPM Nautical Foundation is a non-profit archaeological research and educational organization dedicated to the advancement of maritime archaeology that includes littoral surveys and excavation of individual shipwreck and harbor sites.

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Ruben Orbeli

Ruben Orbeli (Ռուբեն Աբգարի Օրբելի, Ruben Abgari Orbeli; Рубен Абгарович Орбели, Ruben Abgarovich Orbeli; 26 January (O.S. 7 February) 1880 – 9 May 1943) — a Soviet archeologist, historian and jurist, who was renowned as the founder of Soviet underwater archeology.

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Rubidium–strontium dating

The rubidium-strontium dating method is a radiometric dating technique used by scientists to determine the age of rocks and minerals from the quantities they contain of specific isotopes of rubidium (87Rb) and strontium (87Sr, 86Sr).

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Ruby the Galactic Gumshoe

Ruby the Galactic Gumshoe is the title character of a science fiction radio drama series by the ZBS Foundation, written by Thomas Lopez.

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Rudnik (mountain)

Rudnik (Serbian Cyrillic: Рудник) is a mountain in central Serbia, near the town of Gornji Milanovac.

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Rudolf Drößler

Rudolf Drößler (born 18 May 1934 in Zeitz) is a German specialized book author and science-journalist.

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Rudolf Schöll

Rudolf Schöll (1 September 1844 in Weimar – 10 June 1893 in Munich) was a German classical scholar.

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Rudolf Virchow lecture

The Rudolf Virchow lecture was an annual public lecture delivered by an eminent researcher in the field of Palaeolithic archaeology in Neuwied (Germany).

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Rudolf Wagner

Rudolf Friedrich Johann Heinrich Wagner (30 July 1805 – 13 May 1864) was a German anatomist and physiologist and the co-discoverer of the germinal vesicle.

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Ruffenhofen Roman Park

Ruffenhofen Roman Park (Römerpark Ruffenhofen) is an archaeological park in der region of Hesselberg in the south of the county of Ansbach in the German state of Bavaria.

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Ruhr University Bochum

The Ruhr-University Bochum (German: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, RUB), located on the southern hills of central Ruhr area Bochum, was founded in 1962 as the first new public university in Germany after World War II.

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Ruins

Ruins are the remains of human-made architecture: structures that were once intact have fallen, as time went by, into a state of partial or total disrepair, due to lack of maintenance or deliberate acts of destruction.

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Rujm el-Hiri

Rujm el-Hiri (رجم الهري, Rujm al-Hīrī; גִּלְגַּל רְפָאִים Gilgal Refā'īm or Rogem Hiri) is an ancient megalithic monument consisting of concentric circles of stone with a tumulus at center.

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Run for the Sun

Run for the Sun is a 1956 Technicolor thriller adventure film released by United Artists, the third film to officially be based on Richard Connell's classic suspense story, "The Most Dangerous Game", after both RKO's The Most Dangerous Game (1932), and their remake, A Game of Death (1945).

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Runamo

Runamo is a cracked dolerite dike in Sweden that was for centuries held to be a runic inscription and gave rise to a famous scholarly controversy in the 19th century.

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Rundling

A Rundling is a form of circular village, mainly in Germany, typical of settlements in the Germanic-Slav contact zone in the Early Medieval period.

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Runesocesius

Runesocesius was a deity whose name appears on an inscription from the region of Évora, the Roman Ebora in modern Portugal in the area inhabited by the Celtici in Lusitania.

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Rupert Friend

Rupert William Anthony Friend (born 9 October 1981) is an English actor, director, screenwriter, and producer.

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Rupert Gerritsen

Rupert Gerritsen (1953–2013) was an Australian historian and a noted authority on Indigenous Australian prehistory.

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Rus' Khaganate

The Rus' Khaganate is the name applied by some modern historians to a hypothetical polity postulated to exist during a poorly documented period in the history of Eastern Europe, roughly the late 8th and early-to-mid-9th centuries AD.

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Rush, Dublin

Rush (officially An Ros) is a small seaside town in Fingal, County Dublin, Ireland.

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Russell Tuttle

Russell Howard Tuttle (born August 18, 1939) is a distinguished primate morphologist, paleoanthropologist, and a four-field (linguistics, archaeology, sociocultural anthropology and biological anthropology) trained Anthropologist.

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Russian cultural heritage register

The national cultural heritage register of Russia (Единый государственный реестр объектов культурного наследия is a registry of historically or culturally significant man-made immovable properties – landmark buildings, industrial facilities, memorial homes of notable people of the past, monuments, cemeteries and tombs, archaeological sites and cultural landscapes – man-made environments and natural habitats significantly altered by humans. The register continues a tradition established in 1947 and is governed by a 2002 law "On the objects of cultural heritage (monuments of culture and history)" (Law 73-FZ). The register is maintained by the Federal Service for Monitoring Compliance with Cultural Heritage Legislation (a branch of the federal Ministry of Culture); the publicly available online database is hosted by the Ministry of Culture. Its primary purpose is to aggregate the regional heritage registers maintained by the federal subjects of Russia, monitor the state of heritage objects and compliance with relevant laws. The legal framework of the register, as of May 2009, remains incomplete and the register itself is not yet matched to lists of protected buildings maintained by regional and municipal authorities. It includes around 100,000 items while the local lists total in excess of 140,000. Of these 42,000 are rated as national landmarks, while the rest are of regional or local significance. The Ministry of Culture admits that many items on the registers have been destroyed. Natural landmarks and reserves (apart from cultural landscapes), movable art, archives, museum and library collections are not part of the register and are governed by different laws and agencies.A roundup of legislation on different preservation topics is provided in: A different listing, State Code of Particularly Valuable Objects of Cultural Heritage of the Peoples of the Russian Federation,English translation as in created in 1992, includes the most conspicuous man-made landmarks as well as operating institutions: museums, archives, theatres, universities and academies.

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Russian monitor Rusalka

Rusalka (Русалка, Mermaid), was one of two s built for the Imperial Russian Navy in the 1860s.

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Russian State University for the Humanities

The Russian State University for the Humanities (RSUH, RGGU; translit), is a university in Moscow, Russia with over 14,000 students.

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Rutger Sernander

Johan Rutger Sernander (2November 186627October 1944) was a Swedish botanist, geologist and archaeologist.

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Ruth DeEtte Simpson

Ruth DeEtte Simpson (May 6, 1918 – January 19, 2000) was an important woman archeologist at a time when the field of archeology was still dominated by men.

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Ruth Phillips

Ruth B. Phillips is a Canadian art historian and curator who specializes in North American aboriginal art.

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Ruth Shady

Ruth Martha Shady Solís (born 29 December 1946, Callao, Perú) is a Peruvian anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Ruth Tringham

Ruth Tringham (born 14 October, 1940) is an anthropologist, focusing on the archaeology of Neolithic Europe and southwest Asia.

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Ruthweiler

Ruthweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Rutsweiler an der Lauter

Rutsweiler an der Lauter is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ruxley

Ruxley is a small settlement in southeast London, England, with no present formal boundaries.

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Rynn Berry

Rynn Berry (January 31, 1945 – January 9, 2014) was an American author and expert on the history of vegetarianism and veganism, as well as a pioneer in the animal rights and vegan movements.

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S. E. Winbolt

Samuel Edward Winbolt (1868-1944) was a British classics and history teacher, author and amateur archaeologist.

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Saad Abbas Ismail

Saad A. Ismail is a Kurdish Archaeologist, translator and writer who has published extensively on a range of Archaeological topics, and worked in tens of Archaeological sites around the world.

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Saalburg

The Saalburg is a Roman fort located on the main ridge of the Taunus, northwest of Bad Homburg, Hesse, Germany. It is a cohort fort, part of the Limes Germanicus, the Roman linear border fortification of the German provinces. The Saalburg, located just off the main road roughly halfway between Bad Homburg and Wehrheim is the most completely reconstructed Roman fort in Germany. Since 2005, as part of the Upper German limes, it forms part of a UNESCO World Heritage site. In the modern numbering system for the limes, it is ORL 11.

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Saaremaa

Saaremaa (Danish: Øsel; English (esp. traditionally): Osel; Finnish: Saarenmaa; Swedish & German: Ösel) is the largest island in Estonia, measuring.

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Sabadell History Museum

The Sabadell History Museum or MHS (Museu d'Història de Sabadell) is a pluridisciplinary museum that brings together collections on the archaeology, history and ethnology of the city of Sabadell, especially in relation to wool manufacture and the textile industry.

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Sabah Museum

The Sabah Museum (Malay: Muzium Sabah) is the state museum of Sabah, Malaysia.

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Sabatino Moscati

Sabatino Moscati (November 24 1922 – September 8 1997) was an Italian archaeologist and linguist known for his work on Phoenician and Punic civilizations.

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Sabine Gaudzinski-Windheuser

Sabine Gaudzinski-Windheuser (born 25 June 1965) is a German archaeologist.

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Sabine River (Texas–Louisiana)

The Sabine River is a river, long,U.S. Geological Survey.

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Sac River

The Sac River is a river in the Ozarks of Southwest Missouri.

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Sack of Sandomierz (1260)

The siege and second sack of Sandomierz took place in 1259-1260 during the second Mongol invasion of Poland.

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Sackler Library

The Sackler Library holds a large portion of the classical, art historical, and archaeological works belonging to the University of Oxford, England.

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Sada Mire

Sada Mire (born 1977) is a Swedish-Somali archaeologist, art historian and presenter who currently serves as assistant professor at the faculty of archeology, Leiden University.

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Sadberk Hanım Museum

The Sadberk Hanım Museum (Sadberk Hanım Müzesi) is a private museum located at the Bosporus in Büyükdere quarter of Sarıyer district in Istanbul, Turkey, which was established by the Vehbi Koç Foundation in memory of Vehbi Koç’s deceased wife Sadberk.

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Sadegh Malek Shahmirzadi

Sadegh Malek Shahmirzadi (صادق ملک شهميرزادی) (born April 24, 1940) is an Iranian archaeologist and anthropologist.

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SAFE13 study

The Survey of Academic Field Experiences study, also known as the SAFE13 study, was a survey conducted between February and May of 2013 in order to characterize experiences of scientists working at field sites as they relate to sexual harassment and sexual assault.

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Safed-Bulan

Safed-Bulan (Ala-Buka District, Jalal-Abad Region, Kyrgyzstan) is a village and an archaeological reserve that is considered sacred for Muslims.

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Sahara

The Sahara (الصحراء الكبرى,, 'the Great Desert') is the largest hot desert and the third largest desert in the world after Antarctica and the Arctic.

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Saharan rock art

Saharan rock art is a significant area of archaeological study focusing on artwork carved or painted on the natural rocks of the central Sahara desert.

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Sahasam (2013 film)

Sahasam (English: Courage) is a 2013 Telugu action-adventure film directed by Chandra Sekhar Yeleti and produced by B. V. S. N. Prasad under Sri Venkateswara Cine Chitra.

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Sahiwal District

Sahiwal District (Punjabi and ضِلع ساہِيوال), is a district in the Punjab province of Pakistan.

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Sahiwal Division

Sahiwal Division (Punjabi, ساہیوال) is one of the nine Divisions of Punjab province, Pakistan.

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Saint Croix macaw

The Saint Croix macaw (Ara autocthones) is an extinct species of parrot.

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Saint Joseph

Joseph (translit) is a figure in the Gospels who was married to Mary, Jesus' mother, and, in the Christian tradition, was Jesus's legal father.

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Saint-Chamas

Saint-Chamas (in Provençal Occitan: Sanch Amàs in classical orthography, Sant Chamas according to Mistralian orthography) is a commune in the department of Bouches-du-Rhône in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southern France.

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Saint-Germain-en-Laye

Saint-Germain-en-Laye is a commune in the Yvelines department in the Île-de-France in north-central France.

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Saint-Omer

Saint-Omer (Sint-Omaars) is a commune in France.

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Saints' Rest

Saints' Rest was the second building erected on the campus of the Agricultural College of the State of Michigan (now Michigan State University).

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Sajama Lines

The Sajama Lines of western Bolivia are a network of thousands (possibly tens of thousands) of nearly perfectly straight paths etched into the ground continuously for more than 3,000 years by the indigenous people living near the volcano Sajama.

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Sakarya Museum

Sakarya Museum (a.k.a. Adapazarı Museum Sakarya Müzesi) is a museum in Adapazarı, Turkey.

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Sakıp Sabancı Museum

The Sabancı University Sakıp Sabancı Museum (Sakıp Sabancı Müzesi) is a private fine arts museum in Istanbul, Turkey, dedicated to calligraphic art, religious and state documents, as well as paintings of the Ottoman era.

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Salabhanjika

A salabhanjika or shalabhanjika is the sculpture of a woman, displaying stylized feminine features, standing near a tree and grasping a branch.

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Salamis, Cyprus

Salamis (Σαλαμίς) is an ancient Greek city-state on the east coast of Cyprus, at the mouth of the river Pedieos, 6 km north of modern Famagusta.

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Salima Ikram

Salima Ikram is a professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo, a participant in many Egyptian archaeological projects, the author of several books on Egyptian archaeology, a contributor to various magazines and a frequent guest on pertinent television programs.

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Salisbury Island (Recherche Archipelago)

Salisbury Island is located in the Recherche Archipelago off the south coast of Western Australia.

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Salisbury Plain

Salisbury Plain is a chalk plateau in the south western part of central southern England covering.

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Sally Fletcher

Sally Louise Fletcher (also Copeland and Keating) is a fictional character from the Australian soap opera Home and Away, played by Kate Ritchie.

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Salomon Reinach

Salomon Reinach (29 August 1858 – 4 November 1932) was a French archaeologist and religious historian.

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Saltovo-Mayaki

Saltovo-Mayaki or Saltovo-Majaki is the name given by archaeologists to the early medieval culture of the Pontic steppe region roughly between the Don and the Dnieper Rivers, flourishing roughly between the years of 700 and 950.

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Salvador Debenedetti

Salvador Santiago Lorenzo Debenedetti (March 2, 1884September 30, 1930) was an Argentine archaeologist, anthropologist and educator.

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Sam Beckett

Dr.

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Sam Zemurray

Samuel Zemurray (nicknamed "Sam the Banana Man"; born Schmuel Zmurri on January 18, 1877, in Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire, present-day Chişinău, Moldova; died November 30, 1961, in New Orleans, Louisiana) was a Jewish businessman who made his fortune in the banana trade.

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Samara Arboretum

The Samara Arboretum (French Arboretum de Samara) is an arboretum and botanical garden located in the Samara historical park in La Chaussée-Tirancourt, Somme, Picardy, France.

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Samuel Ball Platner

Samuel Ball Platner (December 4, 1863 – August 20, 1921) was an American classicist and archaeologist.

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Samuel Epstein (geochemist)

Samuel Epstein (December 9, 1919 – September 17, 2001) was a Canadian-American geochemist who developed methods for reconstructing geologic temperature records using stable isotope geochemistry.

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Samuel Ferguson

Sir Samuel Ferguson (10 March 1810 – 9 August 1886) was an Irish poet, barrister, antiquarian, artist and public servant.

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Samuel Haven

Samuel Forster Haven (May 28, 1806 in Dedham, Massachusetts – September 5, 1881) was an American archeologist and anthropologist.

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Samuel Ifor Enoch

The Rev.

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Samuel Kirkland Lothrop

Samuel Kirkland Lothrop (1892–1965) was an archaeologist and anthropologist who specialized in Central and South American Studies.

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Samuel Krauss

Samuel Krauss (Ukk, February 18, 1866 - Cambridge, June 4, 1948) was professor at the Jewish Teachers' Seminary, Budapest, 1894–1906, and at the Jewish Theological Seminary, Vienna, 1906-1938.

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Samuel Lysons

Samuel Lysons FRS (1763 – June 1819) was an English antiquarian and engraver who, together with his elder brother Daniel Lysons (1762–1834), published several works on antiquarian topics.

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Samuel Woodward

Samuel Woodward (3 October 1790 – 14 January 1838), English geologist and antiquary, was born at Norwich.

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San Diego (ship)

The galleon San Diego was built as the trading ship San Antonio before hastily being converted into a warship.

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San Diego Museum of Man

The San Diego Museum of Man is a museum of anthropology located in Balboa Park, San Diego, California and housed in the historic landmark buildings of the California Quadrangle.

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San José Mogote

San José Mogote is a pre-Columbian archaeological site of the Zapotec, a Mesoamerican culture that flourished in the region of what is now the Mexican state of Oaxaca.

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San Marcos de Apalache Historic State Park

San Marcos de Apalache Historic State Park is a Florida State Park in Wakulla County, Florida organized around the historic site of a Spanish colonial fort (known as Fort St. Marks by the English and Americans), which was used by succeeding nations that controlled the area.

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San Marcos Springs

San Marcos Springs is the second largest natural cluster of springs in Texas.

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San Pablo Huitzo

San Pablo Huitzo (commonly referred to as Huitzo) is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico.

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San Salvador Island

San Salvador Island (known as Watlings Island from the 1680s until 1925) is an island and district of the Bahamas.

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San Severino Marche

San Severino Marche is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Macerata in the Italian region Marche, located about southwest of Ancona and about southwest of Macerata.

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San Telmo Museoa

San Telmo Museoa, or STM is a Basque society museum located in Donostia-San Sebastián, addressing old and contemporary Basque culture, arts and history in a European, global context.

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Sanabes

Sanabes (سنابس) is one of the villages in Tarut Island, the second biggest island that is located on the east coast Saudi Arabia in the Persian Gulf.

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Sanak Island

Sanak Island (Sanaĝax) is an island in the Fox Islands group of the Aleutian Islands in the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Sanchi

Sanchi Stupa, also written Sanci, is a Buddhist complex, famous for its Great Stupa, on a hilltop at Sanchi Town in Raisen District of the State of Madhya Pradesh, India.

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Sand, Applecross

Sand on the Applecross Peninsula in Wester Ross, Scotland, is an archaeological site.

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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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Sangoan

The Sangoan archaeological industry is the name given by archaeologists to a Palaeolithic tool manufacturing style which may have developed from the earlier Acheulian types.

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Sanhedria Cemetery

Sanhedria Cemetery (בית עלמין סנהדריה) is a 27-dunam (6.67-acre) Jewish burial ground in the Sanhedria neighborhood of Jerusalem, adjacent to the intersection of Levi Eshkol Boulevard, Shmuel HaNavi Street, and Bar-Ilan Street.

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Sankei Children's Book Award

, literally "Sankei Children's Publishing Culture Award", is a major and the oldest Children's literary awards in Japan.

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Sankt Julian

Sankt Julian (often rendered St. Julian) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Sanne Houby-Nielsen

Sanne Houby-Nielsen (born 5 May 1960) is a Danish-Swedish archaeologist and museum director.

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Sanok

Sanok (in full the Royal Free City of Sanok - Królewskie Wolne Miasto Sanok, Cянік Sianik, Sanocum, סאניק, Sonik) is a town in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship of south-eastern Poland with 38,397 inhabitants, as of June 2016.

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Sant Andreu de Llavaneres

Sant Andreu de Llavaneres is a municipality located 36 km north of Barcelona (Catalonia) (Spain), along the Mediterranean coast, between Mataró and Sant Vicenç de Montalt.

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Santa Cruz de Tenerife

Santa Cruz de Tenerife (commonly abbreviated as Santa Cruz is a global city (with Sufficiency status) and capital (jointly with Las Palmas) of the Canary Islands, the capital of Province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, and of the island of Tenerife. Santa Cruz has a population of 206,593 (2013) within its administrative limits. The urban zone of Santa Cruz extends beyond the city limits with a population of 507,306 and 538,000 within urban area. It is the second largest city in the Canary Islands and the main city on the island of Tenerife, with nearly half the island population living in or around it. Santa Cruz is located in northeast quadrant of Tenerife, about off the northwestern coast of Africa within the Atlantic Ocean. The distance to the nearest point of mainland Spain is about. Between the 1833 territorial division of Spain and 1927 Santa Cruz de Tenerife was the sole capital of the Canary Islands, until 1927 when a decree ordered that the capital of the Canary Islands be shared, as it remains at present. on wikisource at the official website of the Canary Islands Government The port is of great importance and is the communications hub between Europe, Africa and Americas, with cruise ships arriving from many nations. The city is the focus for domestic and inter-island communications in the Canary Islands. The city is home to the Parliament of the Canary Islands, the Canarian Ministry of the Presidency (shared on a four-year cycle with Las Palmas), one half of the Ministries and Boards of the Canarian Government, (the other half being located in Gran Canaria), the Tenerife Provincial Courts and two courts of the Superior Court of Justice of the Canary Islands. There are several faculties of the La Laguna University in Santa Cruz, including the Fine Arts School and the Naval Sciences Faculty. Its harbour is one of Spain's busiest; it comprises three sectors. It is important for commercial and passenger traffic, as well as for being a major stopover for cruisers en route from Europe to the Caribbean. The city also has one of the world's largest carnivals. The Carnival of Santa Cruz de Tenerife now aspires to become a World Heritage Site, and is the most important of Spain and the second largest in the world. The main landmarks of the city include the Auditorio de Tenerife (Auditorium of Tenerife), the Santa Cruz Towers (Torres de Santa Cruz) and the Iglesia de la Concepción. Santa Cruz de Tenerife hosts the first headquarters of the Center UNESCO in the Canary Islands. In recent years the city of Santa Cruz de Tenerife has seen the construction of a significant number of modern structures and the city's skyline is the sixth in height across the country, only behind Madrid, Benidorm, Barcelona, Valencia and Bilbao. In 2012, the British newspaper The Guardian included Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the list of the five best places in the world to live. The 82% of the municipal territory of Santa Cruz de Tenerife is considered a natural area, this is due in large part to the presence of the Anaga Rural Park. This fact makes Santa Cruz the third largest municipality in Spain with the highest percentage of natural territory, after Cuenca (87%) and Cáceres (83%).

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Santa Fe de Toloca

Santa Fe de Toloca (Teleco, Toloco or Señor Santo Tomás de Santa Fe) was a Spanish mission that existed near the Santa Fe River in the northwestern part of what is now Alachua County, Florida, United States during the 17th century.

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Santa Fe, New Mexico

Santa Fe (or; Tewa: Ogha Po'oge, Yootó) is the capital of the U.S. state of New Mexico.

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Santa Giusta

Santa Giusta (Santa Justa) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Oristano in the Italian region of Sardinia, located about northwest of Cagliari and about southeast of Oristano in the Campidano area.

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Santa Maria Antiqua

Santa Maria Antiqua (Ancient Church of Saint Mary) is a Roman Catholic Marian church in Rome, Italy, built in the 5th century in the Forum Romanum, and for a long time the monumental access to the Palatine imperial palaces.

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Santa Monica Mountains

The Santa Monica Mountains is a coastal mountain range in Southern California, paralleling the Pacific Ocean.

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Santa Rosa Creek

Santa Rosa Creek is a 22-mile-long (35 km) stream in Sonoma County, California which rises on Hood Mountain and discharges to the Laguna de Santa Rosa by way of the Santa Rosa Flood Control Channel.

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Santa Rosa District, Lima

Santa Rosa is a district of the Lima Province in Peru.

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Santee National Wildlife Refuge

Santee National Wildlife Refuge is a refuge alongside Lake Marion, an impoundment of the Santee River of Clarendon County, South Carolina.

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Santorini

Santorini (Σαντορίνη), classically Thera (English pronunciation), and officially Thira (Greek: Θήρα), is an island in the southern Aegean Sea, about 200 km (120 mi) southeast of Greece's mainland.

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Sanxingdui

Sanxingdui is the name of an archaeological site and a major Bronze Age culture in modern Sichuan, China.

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Sanyangzhuang

Sanyangzhuang is an archaeological site in Henan Province, China.

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Saqqara Bird

The Saqqara Bird is a bird-shaped artifact made of sycamore wood, discovered during the 1898 excavation of the Pa-di-Imen tomb in Saqqara, Egypt.

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Sara C. Bisel

Dr.

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Sara Yorke Stevenson

Sara Yorke Stevenson (February 19, 1847 – November 14, 1921) was a prominent American archaeologist.

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Sarah Kenderdine

Sarah Kenderdine is a professor at UNSW Art & Design in Sydney, Australia, and the director of visualisation for the university's transdisciplinary Expanded Perception and Interaction Centre.

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Sarah Milledge Nelson

Sarah Milledge Nelson (born 1931) is an American archaeologist and a professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Denver, United States.

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Sarah Parcak

Sarah Helen Parcak is an American archaeologist, Egyptologist, and remote sensing expert, who has used satellite imaging to identify potential archaeological sites in Egypt, Rome, and elsewhere in the former Roman Empire.

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Sarangani

Sarangani, or Saraŋgani (Lalawigan sa Sarangani), is a province in the Philippines located in the Soccsksargen region.

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Saratoga Gas, Electric Light and Power Company Complex

The former Saratoga Gas, Electric Light and Power Company Complex is located near the northern boundary of Saratoga Springs, New York, United States.

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Sarawak State Museum

The Sarawak State Museum (Muzium Negeri Sarawak) is the oldest museum in Borneo.

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Sarcophagus (The Outer Limits)

"Sarcophagus" is an episode of The Outer Limits (new series) television show.

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Sarmersbach

Sarmersbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Sartène

Sartène, is a commune in the Corse-du-Sud department of France on the island of Corsica.

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Sasanian conquest of Jerusalem

The Sasanian Empire conquered Jerusalem after a brief siege in 614, during the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628, after the Persian Shah Khosrau II appointed his general Shahrbaraz to conquer the Byzantine controlled areas of the Near East.

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Saskatchewan Archaeological Society

The Saskatchewan Archaeological Society is a society of amateur and professional archaeologists who encourage the preservation of archaeological artifacts and sites, publish, educate and assist the public in the interest of archaeological activities.

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Satna district

Satna District is a district of Madhya Pradesh state in central India.

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Saul Alinsky

Saul David Alinsky (January 30, 1909 – June 12, 1972) was an American community organizer and writer.

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Saumur

Saumur is a commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France.

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Sauro Gelichi

Sauro Gelichi (born Piombino (LI), 15 April 1954) is a Medieval archaeologist and a professor at Ca' Foscari University of Venice.

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Savant (Wildstorm)

Savant is a fictional comic book character, created by writer Chris Claremont and artist Jim Lee, that has appeared in books published by Wildstorm Productions and DC Comics.

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Savez Izviđača Srbije

Savez Izviđača Srbije ('Савез Извиђача Србије'), English: Scout Association of Serbia) is the primary national Scouting organization of Serbia. A referendum on independence was held in Montenegro on May 21, 2006, voting to leave its state union with Serbia by a narrow margin. Montenegro became the world's 193rd recognized sovereign state, which has then split the Savez Izviđača Srbije i Crne Gore (Scout Association of Serbia and Montenegro), as happened with Czechoslovakia in 1993, meaning that the membership in the World Organization of the Scout Movement was transferred to Savez Izviđača Srbije.

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Savignano Irpino

Savignano Irpino is a village and comune in the province of Avellino, in the Campania region of southern Italy.

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Sayram (city)

Sayram (Сайрам, Sayram, سايرام; Sayrom, Сайром, سەيرام; إسفیجاب ‘Isfījāb; اسپیجاب, Espījāb/Espijâb) is a rural locality located in southeastern South Kazakhstan Region on the Sayram Su River, which rises at the nearby 4000-meter mountain Sayram Su.

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Sándor Petőfi

Sándor Petőfi (né Petrovics;LUCINDA MALLOWS,, Bradt Travel Guides, 2008, p. 7Sándor Petőfi, George Szirtes,, Hesperus Press, 2004, p. 1 Alexander Petrovič; Александар Петровић; 1 January 1823 – most likely 31 July 1849) was a Hungarian poet and liberal revolutionary.

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Sándor Soproni

Sándor Soproni (Szentendre Kingdom of Hungary 21 November 1926 – Budapest, Hungary, 10. November 1995) was a classical archeologist, of the Roman period.

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São Jorge Castle

São Jorge Castle (Castelo de São Jorge;; Saint George Castle) is a Moorish castle occupying a commanding hilltop overlooking the historic centre of the Portuguese city of Lisbon and Tagus River.

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Sélestat

Sélestat (Alsatian: Schlettstàdt; German: Schlettstadt) is a commune in the northeast region of France.

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Sérgio Mascarenhas de Oliveira

Sérgio Mascarenhas de Oliveira (b. May 2, 1928, Rio de Janeiro) is a noted Brazilian experimental physicist, educator and scientific leader.

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Sörmland Museum

The Sörmland Museum is the county museum of Södermanland County in Sweden.

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Sālote Tupou III

Sālote Tupou III (born Sālote Mafile‘o Pilolevu; 13 March 1900 – 16 December 1965) was the first Queen regnant and third Monarch of the Kingdom of Tonga from 1918 to her death in 1965.

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Săveni

Săveni is a small town located in Botoșani County in the Moldavia region in northeastern Romania.

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Scalps

Scalps is a 1983 American horror film directed by Fred Olen Ray that concerns a vengeful Native American spirit.

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Scandinavian Scotland

Scandinavian Scotland refers to the period from the 8th to the 15th centuries during which Vikings and Norse settlers, mainly Norwegians and to a lesser extent other Scandinavians, and their descendents colonised parts of what is now the periphery of modern Scotland.

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Scandinavism

Scandinavism, also called Scandinavianism, Pan-Scandinavianism,.

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Scar boat burial

The Scar boat burial is a Viking boat burial near the village of Scar, on Sanday, in Orkney, Scotland.

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Scarab of Ra

Scarab of Ra is a Mac OS shareware computer game written in 1987 by Rick Holzgrafe and released in 1988 by Semicolon Software.

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Schaeffer (surname)

Schaeffer is a distinguished surname, German in origin.

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Schauren

Schauren is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Schönborn, Rhein-Hunsrück

Schönborn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Schönenberg-Kübelberg

Schönenberg-Kübelberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Schöningen

Schöningen is a town of about 11,000 inhabitants in the district of Helmstedt, in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Schüttorf

Schüttorf is a town in the district of Grafschaft Bentheim in southwesternmost Lower Saxony near the Dutch border and the boundary with Westphalia (North Rhine-Westphalia).

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Scheduled monuments in Bath and North East Somerset

Bath and North East Somerset (commonly referred to as BANES or B&NES) is a unitary authority created on 1 April 1996, following the abolition of the County of Avon, which had existed since 1974.

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Schellweiler

Schellweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Schikorr reaction

The Schikorr reaction formally describes the conversion of the iron(II) hydroxide (Fe(OH)2) into iron(II,III) oxide (Fe3O4).

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Schlierschied

Schlierschied is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Schloss Gobelsburg

Schloss Gobelsburg is a winery in the Kamptal wine growing region in Lower Austria, some 50 miles to the north west of Vienna.

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Schmißberg

Schmißberg (or Schmissberg) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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School Babysitters

is a Japanese manga series by Hari Tokeino.

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School for Advanced Research

The School for Advanced Research (SAR), until 2007 known as the School of American Research and founded in 1907 as the School for American Archaeology (SAA), is an advanced research center located in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA.

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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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Schotten

Schotten is a town in the middle of Hesse, Germany.

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Schwabmünchen

Schwabmünchen (Swabian: Mingkchinga) is a town in Bavaria in the administrative region of Swabia south of Augsburg in the Augsburg district.

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Sci Fi Investigates

Sci Fi Investigates is a six episode reality television series featuring skeptic Rob Mariano, forensic specialist Deborah Dobrydney, archaeologist Bill Doleman, and paranormal investigator Richard Dolan, as they look at paranormal and supernatural phenomenon and try to explain them.

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Science and technology in Venezuela

Science and technology in Venezuela includes research based on exploring Venezuela's diverse ecology and the lives of its indigenous peoples.

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Science and technology of the Song dynasty

The Song dynasty (960–1279 CE) provided some of the most significant technological advances in Chinese history, many of which came from talented statesmen drafted by the government through imperial examinations.

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Science Museum of Minnesota

Science Museum of Minnesota is an American museum focused on topics in technology, natural history, physical science, and mathematics education.

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Scientific racism

Scientific racism (sometimes referred to as race biology, racial biology, or race realism) is the pseudoscientific belief that empirical evidence exists to support or justify racism (racial discrimination), racial inferiority, or racial superiority.

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Scientist

A scientist is a person engaging in a systematic activity to acquire knowledge that describes and predicts the natural world.

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Scolt Head Island

Scolt Head Island is an offshore barrier island between Brancaster and Wells-next-the-Sea in north Norfolk.

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Scorpion II

Scorpion II (Ancient Egyptian: possibly Selk or Weha), also known as King Scorpion, refers to the second of two kings or chieftains of that name during the Protodynastic Period of Upper Egypt.

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Scorpion Macehead

The Scorpion macehead (also known as the Major Scorpion macehead) is a decorated ancient Egyptian macehead found by British archeologists James E. Quibell and Frederick W. Green in what they called the main deposit in the temple of Horus at Hierakonpolis during the dig season of 1897/1898.

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Scotchtown (plantation)

Scotchtown is a plantation located in Hanover County, Virginia, that from 1771–1778 was owned and used as a residence by Patrick Henry, his wife Sarah and their children.

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Scotland in the Early Middle Ages

Scotland was divided into a series of kingdoms in the early Middle Ages, i.e. between the end of Roman authority in southern and central Britain from around 400 CE and the rise of the kingdom of Alba in 900 CE.

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Scouting in Yugoslavia

The Scout movement in Yugoslavia was served by different organizations during the existence of the multi-ethnic state.

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Scrameustache

The Scrameustache is a fictional character in a science-fiction Franco-Belgian comics series of the same name.

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Scrooge McDuck

Scrooge McDuck is a fictional character created in 1947 by Carl Barks during his time as a work-for-hire for The Walt Disney Company.

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Sculpture

Sculpture is the branch of the visual arts that operates in three dimensions.

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Sculpture Review

Sculpture Review is the official illustrated publication of the National Sculpture Society (NSS).

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Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

The Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (SNS) is a public higher learning institution in Pisa, Italy.

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Scutum (shield)

The Scutum (plural scuta) was a type of shield used among Italic peoples in the archaic period, and then by the army of ancient Rome starting about the fourth century BC.

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Scythian art

Scythian art is art, primarily decorative objects, such as jewellery, produced by the nomadic tribes in the area known to the ancient Greeks as Scythia, which was centred on the Pontic-Caspian steppe and ranged from modern Kazakhstan to the Baltic coast of modern Poland and to Georgia.

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Sea of Galilee Boat

The Ancient Galilee Boat, also known as the Jesus Boat, is an ancient fishing boat from the 1st century AD, discovered in 1986 on the north-west shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel.

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Seabird

Seabirds (also known as marine birds) are birds that are adapted to life within the marine environment.

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Seafood

Seafood is any form of sea life regarded as food by humans.

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Seal (emblem)

A seal is a device for making an impression in wax, clay, paper, or some other medium, including an embossment on paper, and is also the impression thus made.

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Sean Sasser

Sean Franklin Sasser (October 25, 1968 – August 7, 2013) was an American educator, pastry chef and reality television personality best known for his appearances on MTV's The Real World: San Francisco, which depicted his relationship with fellow AIDS activist Pedro Zamora.

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Sears-Kay Ruin

The Sears-Kay Ruin are the remains of what once was a fortification of the Hohokam, an ancient Native-American tribe.

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Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük

The Seated Woman of Çatalhöyük (also Çatal Höyük) is a baked-clay, nude female form, seated between feline-headed arm-rests.

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Seax

Seax (also sax, sæx, sex; invariant in plural, latinized sachsum) is an Old English word for "knife".

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Sebakh

Sebakh (سباخ, less commonly transliterated as sebbakh) is an Arabic word that translates to "fertilizer".

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Sebastia, Nablus

Sebastia (سبسطية, Sabastiyah;, Sevastee;, Sebasti; Sebaste) is a Palestinian village of over 4,500 inhabitants,.

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Sebastian Brock

Sebastian Paul Brock, FBA (born 1938, London) is generally acknowledged as the foremost academic in the field of Syriac language today.

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Sebbe Als

Sebbe Als is a replica of a Viking ship, Skuldelev wreck no.

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Sebkha-El-Coursia

Sebkha-El-Coursia is a salt pan, locality and archaeological site in Tunisia.

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Second Temple

The Second Temple (בֵּית־הַמִּקְדָּשׁ הַשֵּׁנִי, Beit HaMikdash HaSheni) was the Jewish Holy Temple which stood on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem during the Second Temple period, between 516 BCE and 70 CE.

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Secondary burial

The secondary burial (German: Nachbestattung or Sekundärbestattung) is a feature of certain prehistoric grave sites of all types, identified since the New Stone Age, which is a frequent feature of megalithic tombs and tumuli.

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Secondary cremation

Primary cremation and secondary cremation are terms in archaeology for describing burials of cremated bodies.

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Secondary research

Secondary research involves the summary, collation and/or synthesis of existing research.

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Secrets of the Terra-Cotta Soldier

Secrets of the Terra-Cotta Soldier is a 2014 children's historical novel with fantasy elements written by Ying Chang Compestine and her son, Vinson Compestine.

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Section (archaeology)

In archaeology a section is a view in part of the archaeological sequence showing it in the vertical plane, as a cross section, and thereby illustrating its profile and stratigraphy.

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Sedat Alp

Professor Sedat Alp (January 1, 1913 in Veroia – October 9, 2006 in Ankara) was the first archaeologist in Turkey with a specialization in Hittitology, and is among the foremost names in the field.

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Sedgeford Historical and Archaeological Research Project

The Sedgeford Historical and Archaeological Research Project (SHARP) is a long-term, multidisciplinary research project based in north-west Norfolk, United Kingdom.

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Seiðr

In Old Norse, seiðr (sometimes anglicized as seidhr, seidh, seidr, seithr, seith, or seid) was a type of sorcery practiced in Norse society during the Late Scandinavian Iron Age.

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Seifollah Kambakhshfard

Seifollah Kambakhshfard (سیف‌الله کامبخش‌فرد; March 21, 1929 – November 28, 2010) was an Iranian archaeologist, who specialized in archaeology and Ancient History of Iran.

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Seine–Oise–Marne culture

Megalithic grave The Seine–Oise–Marne or SOM culture is the name given by archaeologists to the final culture of the Neolithic and first culture of the Chalcolithic in northern France and southern Belgium.

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Sekhemib-Perenmaat

Sekhemib-Perenma´at (or simply Sekhemib), is the horus name of an early Egyptian king who ruled during the 2nd dynasty.

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Selah Merrill

Selah Merrill, (May 2, 1837 – January 22, 1909) was an American Congregationalist clergyman.

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Selchenbach

Selchenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Selma Al-Radi

Selma Al-Radi (July 23, 1939 – October 7, 2010) was an Iraqi archaeologist who began and led the over twenty-year restoration of the Amiriya Madrasa, which is under consideration as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

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Semavi Eyice

Semavi Eyice (December 9, 1922 in Istanbul, Turkey – May 28, 2018 in Istanbul, Turkey) was a Turkish art historian and archaeologist, who specialises in the study of Byzantine and Ottoman art in Istanbul.

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Semerkhet

Semerkhet is the Horus name of an early Egyptian king who ruled during the first dynasty.

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Semesterferien (TV series)

Semesterferien (literal English translation: 'semester break'), is a TV series broadcast in Germany on ZDF.

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Semni Karouzou

Semni Papaspyridi-Karouzou (1897–1994) was a Classical archaeologist who specialized in the study of pottery from ancient Greece.

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Seneca people

The Seneca are a group of indigenous Iroquoian-speaking people native to North America who historically lived south of Lake Ontario.

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Senegambian stone circles

The Senegambian stone circles lie in The Gambia north of Janjanbureh and in central Senegal.

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Sensweiler

Sensweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Seoul National University

Seoul National University (SNU;, colloquially Seouldae) is a national research university located in Seoul, South Korea.

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Sepy Dobronyi

Baron Joseph "Sepy" De Bicske Dobronyi (April 20, 1922 – May 29, 2010) Hungarian-born sculptor and royal crown jeweler, aristocrat, art collector, world traveler, movie maker, pilot, wine collector, sportsman, playboy, and bon vivant.

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Serer creation myth

The Serer creation myth is the traditional creation myth of the Serer people of Senegal, the Gambia and Mauritania.

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Serer prehistory

The prehistoric and ancient history of the Serer people of modern-day Senegambia has been extensively studied and documented over the years.

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Sergei Teploukhov

Sergei Aleksandrovich Teploukhov (Серге́й Алекса́ндрович Теплоу́хов; March 3, 1888 – March 10, 1934) was a Russian-Soviet archaeologist.

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Sergei Zhebelev

Sergei Aleksandrovich Zhebelev (22 September 22, 1867 Saint Petersburg - 28 December 28, 1941) was a Russian historian and archaeologist who was recognised as an authority on ancient Greek history.

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Sergey Uvarov

Count Sergey Semionovich Uvarov (Серге́й Семёнович Ува́ров) (25 August (5 September) 1786, Moscow – 4 (16) September 1855) was a Russian classical scholar best remembered as an influential imperial statesman under Nicholas I of Russia.

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Sergio Donadoni

Fabrizio Sergio Donadoni (October 13, 1914 – October 31, 2015) was an Italian archaeologist who worked by within the disciple of Egyptology.

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Seriation (archaeology)

In archaeology, seriation is a relative dating method in which assemblages or artifacts from numerous sites, in the same culture, are placed in chronological order.

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Serjilla

Serjilla (سيرجيلة) is one of the best preserved of the Dead Cities in northwestern Syria.

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Serpent Mound

The Great Serpent Mound is a -long, three-foot-high prehistoric effigy mound on a plateau of the Serpent Mound crater along Ohio Brush Creek in Adams County, Ohio.

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Serpent Mounds Park

Serpent Mounds Park is a former historical and recreational park located in Keene, Ontario.

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Sesheshet

Sesheshet, occasionally known as Sesh, was the mother of King Teti, the first and founding pharaoh of the sixth dynasty of Ancient Egypt.

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Sesklo

Sesklo (Σέσκλο) is a village in Greece that is located near Volos, a city located within the municipality of Aisonia.

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Sessenbach

Sessenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a community belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde – in the Westerwaldkreis in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Sete Pecados

Sete Pecados (Seven Sins) is a Brazilian telenovela airing at 7:00 pm, which substituting Pé na Jaca and preceding Beleza Pura.

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Seton Lloyd

Seton Howard Frederick Lloyd, CBE (30 May 1902, Birmingham, England – 7 January 1996, Faringdon, England), was an English archaeologist.

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Settlement of the Americas

Paleolithic hunter-gatherers first entered North America from the North Asian Mammoth steppe via the Beringia land bridge which had formed between northeastern Siberia and western Alaska due to the lowering of sea level during the Last Glacial Maximum.

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Settlements of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture

The study of the settlements of the Cucuteni-Trypillia culture provides important insights into the early history of Europe.

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Seven-Branched Sword

The is a sword of continental manufacture believed to be identical with the artifact of that name, a gift of the king of Baekje that was bestowed upon a Yamato ruler as a gift who is mentioned in the Nihon Shoki in the fifty-second year of the reign of the semi-mythical Empress Jingū.

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Seventh-day Adventist Commentary Reference Series

The Seventh-day Adventist Commentary Reference Series is a set of volumes produced primarily by Seventh-day Adventist scholars, and designed for both scholarly and popular level use.

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Severians

The Severians or Severyans or Siverians (Северяне; Сiверяни; Севяране; Сeверяни) were a tribe or tribal union of early East Slavs occupying areas to the east of the middle Dnieper river, and Danube.

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Sewing

Sewing is the craft of fastening or attaching objects using stitches made with a needle and thread.

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Seymour Gitin

Seymour Gitin (born 1936) is an American archaeologist specializing in ancient Israel, known for his excavations at Tel Miqne-Ekron.

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Shadow marks

Shadow marks are a form of archaeological feature visible from the air.

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Shah Abdul Latif University

Shah Abdul Latif University (جامعہ شاہ عبداللطیف, شاه عبداللطيف يونيورسٽي; abbreviated as SALU), is a public research university located in rural Khairpur of Sindh, Pakistan.

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Shaharpara

Shaharpara (শাহারপাড়া, ꠡꠣꠢꠣꠞꠙꠣꠠꠣ) is a village of historical importance in the south-eastern part of Sunamganj District, Bangladesh.

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Shaheed Benazirabad District

Shaheed Benazirabad District (Sindhi ضلعو بينظير آباد), previously known as Nawabshah District (Sindhi نوابشاہ), is one of the districts in the province of Sindh, Pakistan.

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Shahina Farid

Shahina Farid is a British archaeologist who is best known for her work as Field Director and Project Coordinator at the Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük in Turkey.

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Shahrbanu

Shahrbānū (or Shehr Bano) (شهربانو) (Meaning: "Lady of the Land") is one of the wives of Husayn ibn Ali, (grandson of Muhammad and third Twelver Shī‘ah Imām) and the mother of Ali ibn Husayn (the fourth Imāmī-Twelver Shī‘ah Imām).

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Shahrokh Razmjou

Shahrokh Razmjou is an Iranian archaeologist and historian, specializing in Achaemenid Archaeology and History.

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Shakhura

Shakhura (Arabic:شاخورة, sometimes transliterated as Shakura) is a village situated in north-central Bahrain.

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Shaki Museum of History and Local Lore

The Shaki Museum of History and Local Lore is a museum located in Sheki city of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

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Shakthan Thampuran Palace

Shakthan Thampuran Palace is situated in City of Thrissur in Kerala state, India.

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Shala (tribe)

Shala is a tribe and historical region of northern Albania in the valley of the river Shalë, in the Dukagjin highlands.

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Shandong

Shandong (formerly romanized as Shantung) is a coastal province of the People's Republic of China, and is part of the East China region.

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Shang archaeology

Shang archaeology is concerned with the archaeological evidence for the Shang dynasty.

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Shannon Lee Dawdy

Shannon Lee Dawdy is an American historian, archeologist and anthropologist.

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Shannonbridge

Shannonbridge is a village located on the River Shannon, at the junction of the R444 and R357 regional roads in County Offaly, Ireland.

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Shape analysis (digital geometry)

This article describes shape analysis to analyze and process geometric shapes.

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Shaphan

Shaphan (Hebrew: שפן, which means "rock badger") is the name of a scribe or court secretary mentioned several times in the Old Testament (2 Kings 22:3-14 and 25:22; and parallels in 2 Chronicles 34:8-20; see also Jeremiah 26:24; 36:10-12; 39:14; 40:5 and following; and 43:6).

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Sharada Srinivasan

Sharada Srinivasan is an archaeologist specialising in the scientific study of art, archaeology, archaemetallurgy and culture.

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Sharman Apt Russell

Sharman Apt Russell (born 1954) is a nature and science writer based in New Mexico, United States.

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Sharon Stocker

Sharon (Shari) Stocker is an American archaeologist who is best known, along with her husband, archaeologist Jack L. Davis, for leading an international team of researchers who discovered a previously undisturbed tomb of a Bronze Age warrior in southwest Greece.

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Shazam (wizard)

Shazam is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Sheberghan

Sheberghān or Shaburghān (Uzbek, Pashto, شبرغان), also spelled Shebirghan and Shibarghan, is the capital city of the Jowzjan Province in northern Afghanistan.

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Shebna inscription

The Shebna inscription is an important ancient Hebrew inscription found at Siloam outside Jerusalem in 1870.

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Shedfield

Shedfield is a village and civil parish in the City of Winchester district of Hampshire, England.

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Sheek's Island

Sheek Island is an island in the St. Lawrence River in the Canadian province of Ontario.

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Sheesh Mahal (Lahore Fort)

The Sheesh Mahal (شیش محل; “The Palace of Mirrors”) is located within the Shah Burj block in northern-western corner of Lahore Fort.

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Shefton Museum

The Shefton Museum of Greek Art and Archaeology was an archaeological museum at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, which opened in 1956 and closed in 2008.

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Sheguiandah

Sheguiandah is a Paleo-Indian archaeological site on the northeastern shore of Manitoulin Island, Manitoulin District, Ontario, Canada.

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Sheila Burnford

Sheila Philip Cochrane Burnford née Every (11 May 1918 – 20 April 1984) was a British Canadian writer.

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Sheldon, Derbyshire

Sheldon is a village in the Derbyshire Peak District, England near Bakewell.

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Shell jewelry

Shell jewelry is jewelry that is primarily made from seashells, the shells of marine mollusks.

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Shell ring

Shell rings are archaeological sites with curved shell middens completely or partially surrounding a clear space.

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Shell works

Shell works are large and complex assemblages of shell found in southwest Florida.

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Shemini (parsha)

Shemini, Sh'mini, or Shmini (— Hebrew for "eighth," the third word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 26th weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the third in the Book of Leviticus.

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Shemouniyeh

Shemouniyeh is a Heavy Neolithic archaeological site of the Qaraoun culture in the Palestinian Tubas Governorate in the northeastern West Bank, located five kilometers southwest of Tubas.

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Shen Kuo

Shen Kuo (1031–1095), courtesy name Cunzhong (存中) and pseudonym Mengqi (now usually given as Mengxi) Weng (夢溪翁),Yao (2003), 544.

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Shennong Stream

Shennong Stream (Shennong Xi) is a left tributary of the Yangtze River, located in the Hubei Province of central China.

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Shepaug River

The Shepaug River is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Shepherd Neolithic

Shepherd Neolithic is a name given by archaeologists to a style (or industry) of small flint tools from the Hermel plains in the north Beqaa Valley, Lebanon.

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Sheppard Frere

Sheppard Sunderland Frere, CBE, FSA, FBA (23 August 1916 – 26 February 2015) was a British historian and archaeologist who studied the Roman Empire.

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Shepton Mallet

Shepton Mallet is a town and civil parish in the Mendip district of Somerset in South West England.

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Sherbrooke Nature and Science Museum

The Sherbrooke Nature and Science Museum (Musée de la nature et des sciences de Sherbrooke) is a natural history and science museum in downtown Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada.

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Sherburne F. Cook

Sherburne Friend Cook was a physiologist by training, and served as professor and chairman of the department of physiology at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Sherd

In archaeology, a sherd, or more precisely, potsherd, is commonly a historic or prehistoric fragment of pottery, although the term is occasionally used to refer to fragments of stone and glass vessels, as well.

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Shereen Ratnagar

Shereen F. Ratnagar is an Indian archaeologist whose work has focused on the Indus Valley Civilization.

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Sherlock Holmes (1954 TV series)

Sherlock Holmes was a detective television series aired in syndication in the fall of 1954, based on the Sherlock Holmes stories of Arthur Conan Doyle.

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Sherlock Holmes: The Mystery of the Mummy

Sherlock Holmes: The Mystery of the Mummy is an adventure game for Microsoft Windows, developed by Frogwares and released in 2002.

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Sherwood Washburn

Sherwood Larned Washburn (–), nicknamed "Sherry", was an American physical anthropologist and pioneer in the field of primatology, opening it to the study of primates in their natural habitats.

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Sheshai

Sheshai /mercy/(flax, six) was a clan of Anakim living in Hebron named for a son of Anak in the Bible (Numbers 13:22).

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Shikaripura Ranganatha Rao

Shikaripura Ranganatha Rao (ಶಿಕಾರಿಪುರ ರಂಗನಾಥ ರಾವ್) (1 July 1922 – 3 January 2013), commonly known as Dr.

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Shillourokambos

Shillourokambos is a Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) site near Parekklisia, 6 km east of Limassol in southern Cyprus.

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Shilo, Mateh Binyamin

Shilo (שִׁלֹה / שילה) is an Israeli settlement in the northern West Bank.

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Shin guard

A shin guard or shin pad is a piece of equipment worn on the front of a player’s shin to protect them from injury.

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Shinichi Fujimura

is a Japanese archaeologist who claimed he had found a large number of stone artifacts dating back to the Lower Paleolithic and Middle Paleolithic periods.

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Shinji Kawasaki

is a Japanese archaeologist.

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Shipwreck Conservation Centre

The Shipwreck Conservation Centre is a branch of the National Maritime Museum in Gdańsk, opened in 2016 in a specially designed building in Tczew, near the Vistula River Museum.

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Shire Books

Shire Books are published by Bloomsbury Publishing, a book publishing company based in London, England, and formerly by Shire Publications Ltd.

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Shivers (video game)

Shivers is a single-player horror-themed PC adventure game, released on CD-ROM by Sierra On-Line on September 30, 1995.

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Shmuel Yeivin

Shmuel Yeivin (Hebrew: שמואל ייבין) (September 2, 1896 - February 28, 1982) was an Israeli archaeologist.

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Shoe

A shoe is an item of footwear intended to protect and comfort the human foot while the wearer is doing various activities.

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Shopping mall

A shopping mall is a modern, chiefly North American, term for a form of shopping precinct or shopping center, in which one or more buildings form a complex of shops representing merchandisers with interconnecting walkways that enable customers to walk from unit to unit.

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Shorncliffe Redoubt

Shorncliffe Redoubt is a British Napoleonic earthwork fort.

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Shorne Wood Country Park

Shorne Wood Country Park is in Gravesend, Kent, England.

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Shorwell helmet

The Shorwell helmet is an Anglo-Saxon helmet from the early to mid-sixth century AD found near Shorwell on the Isle of Wight in southern England.

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Shoshone National Forest

Shoshone National Forest is the first federally protected National Forest in the United States and covers nearly in the state of Wyoming.

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Shuafat

Shuafat (شعفاط), also Shu'fat and Sha'fat, is a mostly Arab neighborhood of East Jerusalem, forming part of north-eastern Jerusalem.

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Shush Castle

Shush Castle is located in the ruins of the ancient city of Susa (Shush) in the Khuzestan Province of Iran.

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Sibilobilo Safari Area

Sibilobilo Safari Area comprises the Sibilobilo Islands in Lake Kariba and is part of the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Estate.

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Sicily

Sicily (Sicilia; Sicìlia) is the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea.

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Sid Bradley

Sid (Sidney Arthur James) Bradley (born 1936) is an academic, author and specialist in Anglo-Saxon literature.

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Sidd Finch

Sidd Finch is a fictional baseball player, the subject of the notorious April Fools' Day hoax article "The Curious Case of Sidd Finch" written by George Plimpton and first published in the April 1, 1985 issue of Sports Illustrated.

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Sidney B. Sperry

Sidney Branton Sperry (December 26, 1895 – September 4, 1977) was one of three scholars who were members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who began the scholarly and systematic study of the Book of Mormon in the mid-20th century — the other two being John L. Sorenson and Hugh W. Nibley.

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Sidney van den Bergh

Sidney Van den Bergh, OC, FRS (born 20 May 1929 in Wassenaar) is a retired Canadian astronomer.

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Sidon

Sidon (صيدا, صيدون,; French: Saida; Phoenician: 𐤑𐤃𐤍, Ṣīdūn; Biblical Hebrew:, Ṣīḏōn; Σιδών), translated to 'fishery' or 'fishing-town', is the third-largest city in Lebanon.

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Siege

A siege is a military blockade of a city, or fortress, with the intent of conquering by attrition, or a well-prepared assault.

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Siegfried Horn

Siegfried Herbert Horn (March 17, 1908 – November 28, 1993) was a Seventh-day Adventist archaeologist and Bible scholar.

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Sien, Germany

Sien is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Siena

Siena (in English sometimes spelled Sienna; Sena Iulia) is a city in Tuscany, Italy.

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Sierra Ancha

The Sierra Ancha (“broad range” in Spanish) is a mountain range in Gila County, in central Arizona.

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Sierra de Vicort

Sierra de Vicort, also known as Sierra de Vicor (Sierra de Bicort), is a long mountain range in the Comunidad de Calatayud and Campo de Daroca comarcas of Aragon, Spain.

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Sight Unseen (play)

Sight Unseen is a play by Donald Margulies.

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Sigiburg

The Sigiburg was a Saxon hillfort in Western Germany, overlooking the River Ruhr near its confluence with the River Lenne.

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Sigismund Ernst Richard Krone

Sigismund Ernst Richard Krone was a German naturalist, zoologist, spelunker, archaeologist and researcher born on 18 June 1861 in Dresden, Germany.

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Sigma Sagittarii

Sigma Sagittarii (σ Sagittarii, abbreviated Sigma Sgr, σ Sgr), also named Nunki, is the second-brightest star in the constellation of Sagittarius.

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Sigmaringen Castle

Sigmaringen Castle (German: Schloss Sigmaringen) was the princely castle and seat of government for the Princes of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen.

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Sign of the Cross (novel)

Sign of the Cross was the second novel by New York Times bestselling author Chris Kuzneski.

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Signals of Belief in Early England

Signals of Belief in Early England: Anglo-Saxon Paganism Revisited is an academic anthology edited by the British archaeologists Martin Carver, Alex Sanmark and Sarah Semple which was first published by Oxbow Books in 2010.

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Signs of Life (1968 film)

Signs of Life (Lebenszeichen) is a 1968 feature film written, directed, and produced by Werner Herzog.

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Sigurður Þórarinsson

Sigurdur Thorarinsson (Icelandic: Sigurður Þórarinsson) (January 8, 1912 – February 8, 1983) was an Icelandic geologist, volcanologist, glaciologist, professor and lyricist.

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Sigurd Wallin

David Sigurd Wallin (June 10, 1916 in Nora rural parish in Örebro County, Sweden – May 8, 1999 in Stockholm, Sweden), was a Swedish artist.

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Silence in the Library

"Silence in the Library" is the eighth episode of the fourth series of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who.

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Silifke Museum

Silifke Museum is in Silifke district of Mersin Province, Turkey.

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Silk Road Fashion

Silk Road Fashion is an interdisciplinary research project whose purpose is to investigate communication through clothing during the 1st millennium BC in East Central Asia.

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Sim Bong-geun

Sim Bong-geun (born October 3, 1943 in Goseong) is an archaeologist, university professor and administrator at Dong-A University in Greater Busan, South Korea.

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Simcha Jacobovici

Simcha Jacobovici (born April 4, 1953) is an Israeli-Canadian film director, producer, freelance journalist, and writer.

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Simon James (archaeologist)

Simon James is an archeologist of the Iron Age and Roman period and an author.

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Simon Keay

Simon James Keay, FBA (born May 1954) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Simon Nicholson

Simon Hepworth Nicholson (3 October 1934 - 17 January 1990) was the son of artist Ben Nicholson and his second wife, sculptor Barbara Hepworth.

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Simon Rutar

Simon Rutar (12 October 1851 – 3 May 1903) was a Slovene historian and geographer.

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Simon Stoddart

Simon Stoddart, FSA is a British archaeologist, prehistorian, and academic.

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Simone and Cino Del Duca Foundation

The Simone and Cino Del Duca Foundation is a charitable foundation based in Paris, France.

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Sinagua

The Sinagua were a pre-Columbian culture that occupied a large area in central Arizona from the Little Colorado River, near Flagstaff, to the Salt River, near Sedona, including the Verde Valley, area around San Francisco Mountain, and significant portions of the Mogollon Rim country, between approximately 500 CE and 1425 CE.

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Sinclair Hood

Martin Sinclair Frankland Hood (born 31 January 1917), generally known as Sinclair Hood, is an archaeologist and academic.

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Sindhi Adabi Board

Sindhi Adabi Board is a government sponsored institution in Pakistan for the promotion of Sindhi literature.

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Sines

Sines is a Portuguese city of Setúbal District, the Alentejo region and subregion of the Alentejo coast, with about 18,298 inhabitants (2015 INE).

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Sinixt

The Sinixt"Sinixt Nation…" (also known as the Sin-Aikst or Sin Aikst,Reyes 2002, passim. "Senjextee", "Arrow Lakes Band", or — less commonly in recent decades — simply as "The Lakes") are a First Nations People.

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Sinn, Hesse

Sinn is a community in Middle Hesse, Germany, in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis.

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Sinop Archaeological Museum

Sinop Archaeological Museum, or Sinop Museum (Sinop Arkeoloji Müzesi or Sinop Müzesi), is a national museum in Sinop, Turkey, exhibiting archaeological artifacts found in and around the city.

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Siobhan Thompson

Siobhan Thompson is a British-American sketch comedian and comedy writer.

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Sioux City Public Museum

The Sioux City Public Museum is a museum about the history and culture of Sioux City, Iowa.

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Sipaliwini District

Sipaliwini is the largest district of Suriname, located in the south.

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Sir John Sinclair, 1st Baronet

The Rt Hon Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster, 1st Baronet MP FRS FRSE FLS LLD (10 May 1754 – 21 December 1835) was a Scottish politician, a writer on both finance and agriculture, and the first person to use the word statistics in the English language, in his vast, pioneering work, Statistical Account of Scotland, in 21 volumes.

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Sir Richard Hoare, 2nd Baronet

Sir Richard Colt Hoare, 2nd Baronet FRS (9 December 1758 – 19 May 1838) was an English antiquarian, archaeologist, artist, and traveller of the 18th and 19th centuries, the first major figure in the detailed study of the history of his home county of Wiltshire.

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Sirgenstein Cave

The small Sirgenstein Cave, Sirgensteinhöhle is situated above sea level inside the high Sirgenstein, a limestone rock.

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Sirindhorn

Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn (มหาจักรีสิรินธร,;, born Princess Sirindhorn Debaratanasuda Kitivadhanadulsobhak สิรินธรเทพรัตนสุดา กิติวัฒนาดุลโสภาคย์;; born 2 April 1955) is the second daughter of King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

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Sirkap

Sirkap (Urdu and سر کپ) is the name of an archaeological site on the bank opposite to the city of Taxila, Punjab, Pakistan.

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Sirmium

Sirmium was a city in the Roman province of Pannonia.

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Sisak Fortress

The Sisak Fortress (Tvrđava Sisak or Stari grad Sisak) is an early modern lowland fortification built on the bank of the Kupa River before its mouth into the Sava.

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Sisera

Sisera (Hebrew: סִיסְרָא Sîsərā) was commander of the Canaanite army of King Jabin of Hazor, who is mentioned in of the Hebrew Bible.

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Sistan Basin

The Sistan Basin is an inland endorheic basin encompassing large parts of southwestern Afghanistan and minor parts of southeastern Iran, one of the driest regions in the world and an area subjected to prolonged droughts.

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Sites and monuments record

Each county or unitary authority in the United Kingdom maintains a sites and monuments record or SMR, consisting of a list of known archaeological sites.

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Sivand Dam

Sivand Dam is a dam built in 2007 in Fars Province, Iran.

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Six Hills

The Six Hills are a collection of Roman barrows situated alongside the old Great North Road on Six Hills Common in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England.

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Skagit River

The Skagit River is a river in southwestern British Columbia in Canada and northwestern Washington in the United States, approximately 150 mi (240 km) long.

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Skanderborg

Skanderborg is a town in Skanderborg municipality, Denmark.

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Skarpnäcksfältet

Skarpnäcksfältet (The Skarpnäck Field) is a subdistrict of Skarpnäcks Gård in the Skarpnäck borough of Stockholm, Sweden.

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Skeleton Man

Skeleton Man is a 2004 Sci Fi Pictures original film directed by Johnny Martin and starring Michael Rooker and Casper Van Dien.

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Skinwalkers (2002 film)

Skinwalkers is a 2002 mystery television film based on the novel of the same name by Tony Hillerman, one of his series of mysteries set against contemporary Navajo life in the Southwest.

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Skipsea Castle

Skipsea Castle was a Norman motte and bailey castle near the village of Skipsea, East Riding of Yorkshire, England.

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Skovgårde Voldsted

Skovgårde Voldsted is an ancient monument in Nørager Parish, Norddjurs Municipality, Denmark.

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Skull

The skull is a bony structure that forms the head in vertebrates.

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Slash'EM

Slash'EM (Super Lotsa Added Stuff Hack - Extended Magic) is a variant of the roguelike game NetHack that offers extra features, monsters, and items.

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Slavery in the United States

Slavery in the United States was the legal institution of human chattel enslavement, primarily of Africans and African Americans, that existed in the United States of America in the 18th and 19th centuries.

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Slavic Village Passentin

Slavic Village Passentin (Slawendorf Passentin.) is an archaeological open-air museum located in the destination of Passentin in the land of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in Germany.

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Slöinge

Slöinge is a locality situated in Falkenberg Municipality, Halland County, Sweden, with 950 inhabitants in 2010.

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Slievemore

Slievemore (Sliabh Mór) is the second highest peak on Achill Island after Croaghaun, in County Mayo, Ireland.

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Sligo Bay

Sligo Bay is a natural ocean bay in County Sligo, Republic of Ireland.

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Sloan Canyon National Conservation Area

Sloan Canyon National Conservation Area is a National Conservation Area (NCA) administered by the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

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Slovak National Museum

The Slovak National Museum (Slovenské národné múzeum) is the most important institution focusing on scientific research and cultural education in the field of museology in Slovakia.

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SM UB-65

SM UB-65 was a Type UB III U-boat of the Imperial German Navy during World War I. Ordered on 20 May 1916, the U-boat was built at the Vulkan Werke shipyard in Hamburg, launched on 26 June 1917, and commissioned on 18 August 1917, under the command of Kapitänleutnant Martin Schelle.

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Smederevo Fortress

The Smederevo Fortress (Cмeдepeвcκa твpђaвa/Smederevska tvrđava) is a medieval fortified city in Smederevo, Serbia, which was temporary capital of Serbia in the Middle Ages.

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Smiley

A smiley (sometimes called a happy face or smiley face) is a stylized representation of a smiling humanoid face that is a part of popular culture worldwide.

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Snake Jailbird

Snake Jailbird (usually referred to as simply Snake) is a recurring fictional character in the animated television series The Simpsons, who is voiced by Hank Azaria.

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Sneferka

Sneferka is the serekh-name of an early Egyptian king who may have ruled at the end of the 1st dynasty.

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Snow Crash

Snow Crash is a science fiction novel by American writer Neal Stephenson, published in 1992.

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Snowshoe

A snowshoe is footwear for walking over snow.

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Soapstone

Soapstone (also known as steatite or soaprock) is a talc-schist, which is a type of metamorphic rock.

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Soapstone Ridge

Soapstone Ridge is a mafic-ultramafic geological complex located in the Piedmont region, south-east of Atlanta, Georgia on a area in DeKalb County and neighboring Fulton, and Clayton Counties.

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Social science

Social science is a major category of academic disciplines, concerned with society and the relationships among individuals within a society.

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Society for American Archaeology

The Society for American Archaeology (SAA) is the largest organization of professional archaeologists of the Americas in the world.

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Society for East Asian Archaeology

The Society for East Asian Archaeology (SEAA) is a society for the study of east Asian archaeology.

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Society for Historical Archaeology

The Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA) is a professional organization of scholars concerned with the archaeology of the modern world (15th century-present).

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Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (The Roman Society) was founded in 1910 as the sister society to the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies.

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Society of Architectural Historians of Bengal

The Society of Architectural Historians of Bengal (SAHB) is an international not-for-profit organisation that promotes the study of the built environment of Bengal.

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Society of Dilettanti

The Society of Dilettanti (founded 1734) is a society of noblemen and scholars which sponsors the study of ancient Greek and Roman art, and the creation of new work in the style.

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Society of the Song dynasty

Chinese society during the Song dynasty (960–1279) was marked by political and legal reforms, a philosophical revival of Confucianism, and the development of cities beyond administrative purposes into centers of trade, industry, and maritime commerce.

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Sociobiology

Sociobiology is a field of biology that aims to examine and explain social behavior in terms of evolution.

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Sociocultural evolution

Sociocultural evolution, sociocultural evolutionism or cultural evolution are theories of cultural and social evolution that describe how cultures and societies change over time.

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Sociology of knowledge approach to discourse

The sociology of knowledge approach to discourse (SKAD) is a social science research programme for studying discourse developed by Reiner Keller in order to analyze knowledge relationships and conditions in society.

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Sociopolitical typology

Sociopolitical typology refers to four types, or levels, of a political organization: "band", "tribe", "chiefdom", and "state", created by the anthropologist Elman Service.

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Soekmono

Soekmono (14 July 1922 – 9 July 1997) was an Indonesian archaeologist and historian.

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Software archaeology

Software archaeology or software archeology is the study of poorly documented or undocumented legacy software implementations, as part of software maintenance.

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Sogndal

Sogndal is a municipality in Sogn og Fjordane county, Norway.

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Soham

Soham is a small town and civil parish in east Cambridgeshire, England, just off the A142 between Ely and Newmarket.

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Soho Manufactory

The Soho Manufactory was an early factory which pioneered mass production on the assembly line principle, in Soho, Birmingham, England, at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.

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Sohren

Sohren is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Sohrschied

Sohrschied is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Soil science

Soil science is the study of soil as a natural resource on the surface of the Earth including soil formation, classification and mapping; physical, chemical, biological, and fertility properties of soils; and these properties in relation to the use and management of soils.

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Sol Plaatje University

The Sol Plaatje University, which had provisionally been referred to as the University of the Northern Cape, opened in Kimberley, South Africa, in 2014, accommodating a modest initial intake of 135 students.

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Solentiname Islands

The Solentiname Islands are an archipelago towards the southern end of Lake Nicaragua (also known as Lake Cocibolca) in the Nicaraguan department of Río San Juan.

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Soleto Map

The Soleto Map is a possibly ancient map, which depicts Salento on a small piece of ostrakon derived from a terracotta vase.

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Solidago albopilosa

Solidago albopilosa is a rare species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common name whitehair goldenrod.

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Solin

Solin (Latin and Italian: Salona, Ancient Greek: Σαλώνα) is a town in Dalmatia, Croatia.

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Solnhofen

Solnhofen is a municipality in the district of Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen in the region of Middle Franconia in the Land of Bavaria in Germany.

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Solveig Nordström

Solveig Nordström is a Swedish archeologist.

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Somali studies

Somali studies is the scholarly term for research concerning Somalis and Greater Somalia.

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Somalis

Somalis (Soomaali, صوماليون) are an ethnic group inhabiting the Horn of Africa (Somali Peninsula).

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Somerset Levels

The Somerset Levels are a coastal plain and wetland area of Somerset, South West England, running south from the Mendips to the Blackdown Hills.

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Sonderführer

Sonderführer ("special leader"), abbreviated Sdf or Sf, was a specialist role introduced in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany in 1937 for the mobilization of the German armed forces.

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Song dynasty

The Song dynasty (960–1279) was an era of Chinese history that began in 960 and continued until 1279.

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Sonia Alconini

Sonia Alconini Mujica (born 1965) is a Bolivian anthropologist and archaeologist specializing in the socioeconomic and political development of the formative cultures of Andean civilizations in the Bolivian highlands around Lake Titicaca.

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Sonia Mary Cole

Sonia Mary Cole (née Myers) (1918 in Westminster, London – 1982) was an English geologist, archaeologist, anthropologist and author.

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Sooranad Kunjan Pillai

Sooranad P. N. Kunjan Pillai was a historian, researcher, lexicographer, poet, essayist, literary critic, orator, socio-cultural leader, grammarian, educationist, and scholar of the Malayalam language.

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Sophus Müller

Sophus Otto Müller (24 May 1846 - 23 February 1934) was a Danish archaeologist.

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Sorbonne University

Sorbonne University (Sorbonne Université) is a public research university in Paris, France, established by fusion in 2018 of Paris-Sorbonne University and Pierre and Marie Curie University.

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Soulton Hall

Soulton Hall is a country house in Shropshire, England, located two miles east of the town of Wem, on the B5065.

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Sound of Horror

Sound of Horror (Spanish: El sonido de la muerte) is a 1964 Spanish monster movie directed by José Antonio Nieves Conde.

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Source criticism

Source criticism (or information evaluation) is the process of evaluating an information source, i.e. a document, a person, a speech, a fingerprint, a photo, an observation, or anything used in order to obtain knowledge.

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Sousse Archaeological Museum

The Sousse Archaeological Museum (Tunisian Arabic: المتحف الأثري بسوسة) is an archaeological museum located in Sousse, Sousse Governorate, Tunisia.

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Souterrain

Souterrain (from French sous terrain, meaning "under ground") is a name given by archaeologists to a type of underground structure associated mainly with the European Atlantic Iron Age.

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South African Archaeological Society

The South African Archaeological Society was founded in 1945 to promote public awareness of archaeology and its findings in southern Africa, facilitating interaction between professional archaeologists and people with a lay interest in the subject.

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South American Explorers

South American Explorers, headquartered in Ithaca, New York, is a nonprofit travel, scientific, and educational organization founded in 1977.

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South Australian Archaeology Society

The South Australian Archaeology Society is an avocational archaeology organisation operating in South Australia.

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South Cowton

South Cowton is a village and civil parish located on the site of an abandoned medieval village in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire in England.

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South Florida Museum

The South Florida Museum, located in Bradenton, Florida, is a natural and cultural history museum specializing in the history of Florida's gulf coast.

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South Petherton

South Petherton is a village and civil parish on the River Parrett in the South Somerset district of Somerset, England.

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South Region (Cameroon)

The South Region (Région du Sud) is located in the southwestern and south-central portion of the Republic of Cameroon.

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South Stoa I (Athens)

The South Stoa I of Athens was located on the south side of the Agora, in Athens, Greece, between the Heliaia and the Enneakrounos, a southeastern fountain house.

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South Uist

South Uist (Uibhist a Deas) is the second-largest island of the Outer Hebrides in Scotland.

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Southern England Chalk Formation

The Chalk Formation of Southern England is a system of chalk downland in the south of England.

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Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, (commonly abbreviated SIUE or The "e"), is a coeducational, public Master's college and university in Edwardsville, Illinois, United States about northeast of St. Louis, Missouri.

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Southern Illinois University Press

Southern Illinois University Press or SIU Press, founded in 1956, is a university press located in Carbondale, Illinois, owned and operated by Southern Illinois University.

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Southern Levant

The Southern Levant is a geographical region encompassing the southern half of the Levant.

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Southwestern archaeology

The Greater Southwest has long been occupied by hunter-gatherers and agricultural people.

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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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Space Boy Soran

is a Japanese monochrome anime series created by Kazuya Fukumoto and Yoshikatsu Miyakoshi.

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Space Runaway Ideon

is a 1980 anime television series produced by Sunrise, created and directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino, produced immediately following his most famous work, Mobile Suit Gundam.

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Space syntax

The term space syntax encompasses a set of theories and techniques for the analysis of spatial configurations.

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Spalding Club

The Spalding Club was the name of three successive antiquarian and text publication societies founded in Aberdeen, which published scholarly editions of texts and archaeological studies relevant to the history of Aberdeenshire and its region.

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Spangereid

Spangereid is a former municipality in Vest-Agder county, Norway.

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Spanish conquest of the Muisca

The Spanish conquest of the Muisca took place from 1537 to 1540.

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Spanish wine

Spanish wines are wines produced in Spain.

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Spartia temple

The Spartia temple is an ancient Greek temple and archaeological site on the hill of Spartia, Sesklo, in the Magnesia regional unit.

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Spatula Mundani

The Spatula Mundani was a surgical device invented in the 17th century by the London surgeon James Woodall to treat extreme cases of severe constipation where purgatives had failed.

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Speaking Archaeologically

Speaking Archaeologically is an archaeological education group, based in India, which focuses on Object Analysis, documentation of neglected and forgotten archaeological sites and rescue archaeology.

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Speculative Period

The Speculative Period (1492a.-1840a.) was a term created by Gordon Willey and Sabloff (1993:12-37) to describe the archaeological methods and approaches employed in North America at the time.

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Speleology

Speleology is the scientific study of caves and other karst features, their make-up, structure, physical properties, history, life forms, and the processes by which they form (speleogenesis) and change over time (speleomorphology).

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Spencer MacCallum

Spencer Heath McCallum (born 1931), commonly known as Spencer MacCallum, is an American anthropologist, business consultant and author.

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Spiesheim

Spiesheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Spilsby

Spilsby is a market town, civil parish and electoral ward in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.

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Spirit Lake Massacre

The Spirit Lake Massacre (March 8–12, 1857) was an attack by a Wahpekute band of Santee Sioux on scattered Iowa frontier settlements during a severe winter.

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Spiro Mounds

Spiro Mounds (34 LF 40) is a major Northern Caddoan Mississippian archaeological site located in present-day Eastern Oklahoma.

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Spit (archaeology)

In the field of archaeology, a spit is a unit of archaeological excavation with an arbitrarily assigned measurement of depth and extent.

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Spoil (archaeology)

In Archaeology, spoil is the term used for the soil, dirt and rubble that results from an excavation, and discarded off site on spoil heaps.

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Spokane House

Spokane House was a fur trading post founded in 1810 by the British-Canadian North West Company, located on a peninsula where the Spokane River and Little Spokane River meet.

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Spokeshave

A spokeshave is a tool used to shape and smooth woods in woodworking jobs – often for use as wheel spokes, chair legs (particularly complex shapes such as the cabriole leg), self bows, and arrows.

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Spondulix

Spondulix is 19th-century slang for money or cash, more specifically a reasonable amount of spending money.

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Spondylus

Spondylus is a genus of bivalve molluscs, the only genus in the family Spondylidae.

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Sponsume

Sponsume was an online multicurrency crowd funding platform founded by French entrepreneur Gregory Vincent in 2010.

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Sprang

Sprang is an ancient method of constructing fabric that has a natural elasticity.

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Sprogø

Sprogø is a small, protected Danish island, which is located in the Great Belt, the strait that separates the main islands of Funen and Zealand.

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Spruce Creek Mound Complex

The Spruce Creek Mound Complex is a prehistoric and early historic archeological site in Port Orange, Florida.

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Spurlock Museum

The William R. and Clarice V. Spurlock Museum, better known as the Spurlock Museum, is an ethnographic museum at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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Spurrell

Spurrell is a surname found in Norfolk, Wales and other parts of the United Kingdom, as well as in various countries around the world.

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Spurryhillock

Spurryhillock is a mesolithic archaeological site and modern industrial estate at Stonehaven, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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Spy Smasher

Spy Smasher is the name of two fictional characters appearing in comics published by DC Comics.

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Spyridon Marinatos

Spyridon Nikolaou Marinatos (Σπυρίδων Νικολάου Μαρινάτος; November 4, 1901 – October 1, 1974) was a Greek archaeologist.

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Srečko Brodar

Srečko Brodar (May 6, 1893 – April 27, 1987) was a Slovene archaeologist, internationally best known for excavation of Potok Cave (Potočka zijalka), an Upper Palaeolithic cave site in northern Slovenia.

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Sremska Mitrovica

Sremska Mitrovica (Сремска Митровица) is a city and the administrative center of the Srem District in the autonomous province of Vojvodina, Serbia.

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Sri Lankan place name etymology

Sri Lankan place name etymology is characterized by the linguistic and ethnic diversity of the island of Sri Lanka through the ages and the position of the country in the centre of ancient and medieval sea trade routes.

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Sricity

Sri City is a planned integrated business city (township) located 55 km north of Chennai on NH 16 in the state of Andhra Pradesh, India.

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SS Clan Ranald (1900)

SS Clan Ranald was a two decked, turret deck ship, that sank off the rocky coast near Edithburgh in Australia.

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SS Republic (1853)

SS Republic was a sidewheel steamship, originally named SS Tennessee (also named CSS Tennessee, USS Tennessee, and USS Mobile for a time), lost in a hurricane off the coast of Georgia in October 1865, en route to New Orleans.

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St Andrew's Cathedral, Singapore

Saint Andrew's Cathedral (Malay: Katedral St Andrew; Tamil: செயிண்ட் ஆண்ட்ரூ கதீட்ரல்) is an Anglican cathedral in Singapore, the country's largest cathedral.

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St Cyrus

St Cyrus or Saint Cyrus (Saunt Ceerus), formerly Ecclesgreig (from Eaglais Chiric) is a village in the far south of Aberdeenshire, Scotland.

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St Helen's, Isles of Scilly

St Helen's (Enys Elidius) is one of the fifty or so uninhabited islands in the archipelago of the Isles of Scilly and has an approximate area of.

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St Martin's Church, Colmar

The Église Saint-Martin (St. Martin church) is a Roman Catholic church located in Colmar, Haut-Rhin, France.

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St Michael's Mount

St Michael's Mount (Karrek Loos yn Koos, meaning "hoar rock in woodland") is a small tidal island in Mount's Bay, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St. Anne's Market

St.

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St. Augustine Light

The St.

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St. George Maronite Cathedral, Beirut

Saint George Maronite Cathedral (كاتدرائية مار جرجس للموارنة) is the cathedral of the Maronite Catholic Archeparchy of Beirut, Archdiocese of the city of Beirut, Lebanon.

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St. Lawrence Iroquoians

The St.

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St. Lawrence Island

St.

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St. Mary Reservoir

St.

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St. Mary's City, Maryland

St.

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St. Mary's College of Maryland

St.

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St. Nicholas Church, Demre

St.

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St. Stephens, Alabama

St.

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St. Thomas More College

St.

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St.GIGA

was a satellite radio company that was formed as a subsidiary of satellite television company Wowow and later became semi-independent, forming a keiretsu with its parent.

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Stagville

Stagville Plantation is located in Durham County, North Carolina.

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Stanislao Loffreda

Stanislao Loffreda, O.F.M., (born 15 January 1932) is an Italian Franciscan friar, archaeologist, Palestinian pottery expert and Bible scholar.

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Stanislav Stanilov

Stanislav Stanilov (Bulgarian: Станислав Станилов), (born 9 September 1943, in Gabrovo) is a Bulgarian archaeologist, historian and politician.

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Stanley John Olsen

Stanley John Olsen (24 June 1919 – 23 December 2003) was an American vertebrate paleontologist and one of the founding figures of zooarchaeology in the United States.

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Stanley Slotkin

Stanley Slotkin (1905–1997) was a prominent Los Angeles businessman specializing in medical and party rentals through his company Abbey Rents.

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Stanley South

Stanley A. South (February 2, 1928 - March 20, 2016) was an American archaeologist who was a major proponent of the processual archaeology movement.

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Stantari

Stantari is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Star Trek: Elite Force II

Star Trek: Elite Force II is a first-person shooter video game developed by Ritual Entertainment and published by Activision.

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Star Trek: The Magazine

Star Trek: The Magazine was an authorized monthly tabloid-size periodical published in the United States and Canada by Fabbri Publishing (US) devoted to the Star Trek franchise.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation (season 6)

The sixth season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation commenced airing in broadcast syndication in the United States on September 21, 1992 and concluded on June 21, 1993 after airing 26 episodes.

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Starch analysis

Starch analysis or starch grain analysis is a technique that is useful in archaeological research to determine plant taxa.

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Stargate

Stargate is a science fiction media franchise based on the film written by Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich.

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Stargate (film)

Stargate is a 1994 science fiction adventure film released through Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) and Carolco Pictures.

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Starhawk (comics)

Starhawk (Stakar of the House of Ogord) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

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Starved Rock State Park

Starved Rock State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Illinois, characterized by the many canyons within its.

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State Museum for Nature and Man

The State Museum for Nature and Man (in German: Landesmuseum für Natur und Mensch) is a natural history, ethnology, and archaeology museum in the city of Oldenburg, Lower Saxony, Germany.

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State Museum of History of Uzbekistan

The State Museum of History of Uzbekistan, previously known as the National Museum of Turkestan, was founded in 1876.

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State of nature

The state of nature is a concept used in moral and political philosophy, religion, social contract theories and international law to denote the hypothetical conditions of what the lives of people might have been like before societies came into existence.

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Stateless society

A stateless society is a society that is not governed by a state, or, especially in common American English, has no government.

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Station Stones

The Station Stones are elements of the prehistoric monument of Stonehenge.

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Statue of Horemheb and Amenia

The Statue of Horemheb and Amenia is a large double statue of the Pharaoh Horemheb and his wife Amenia that was found at the ancient site of Saqqara in Egypt.

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Stavanger

Stavanger is a city and municipality in Norway.

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Stead Park

Stead Park is a 1.5-acre (0.61 ha) municipal park located in the Dupont Circle neighborhood of Northwest Washington, D.C. Among its facilities are Stead Recreation Center, located at 1625 P Street NW; a lighted basketball court; an athletic field with a baseball diamond; and a playground.

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Stefan Wouters

Stefan Wouters (born 1972) is a Belgian visual artist, curator and researcher of Happenings and Performance art.

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Stefanos Sarafis

Stefanos Sarafis (Στέφανος Σαράφης, 23 October 1890 – 31 May 1957) was an officer of the Hellenic Army who played an important role during the Greek Resistance.

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Steinau an der Straße

Steinau an der Strasse is a town of around 10,000 in the Main-Kinzig district, in Hesse, Germany.

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Steinbach am Glan

Steinbach am Glan is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Steineberg

Steineberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Stele

A steleAnglicized plural steles; Greek plural stelai, from Greek στήλη, stēlē.

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Stellar designations and names

Designations and names of stars (and other celestial bodies) are currently primarily mediated in the scientific community by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), a de facto authority.

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Stendal

Hansestadt Stendal is a town in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

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Stephen Clarke (archaeologist)

Stephen Harold Henry Clarke is a Welsh archaeologist, he is chairman and founding member of Monmouth Archaeological Society.

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Stephen D. Houston

Stephen Douglas Houston (born November 11, 1958) is an American anthropologist, archaeologist, epigrapher and Mayanist scholar, who is particularly renowned for his research into the pre-Columbian Maya civilization of Mesoamerica.

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Stephen Oppenheimer

Stephen Oppenheimer (born 1947) is a British paediatrician, geneticist, and writer.

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Stephen Plog

Stephen Plog is a notable American archaeologist and anthropologist, who specializes in the pre-Columbian cultures of the American Southwest.

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Stephen Shennan

Stephen Shennan, FBA is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Stephen Williams (archaeologist)

Stephen Williams (August 28, 1926 – June 2, 2017) was an archaeologist at Harvard University who held the title of Peabody Professor of North American Archaeology and Ethnography.

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Steve Sabella

Steve Sabella (ستيف سابيلا), born (May 19, 1975) in Jerusalem, Palestine is a Berlin-based artist who uses photography and photographic installation as his principle modes of expression, and author of the award-winning memoir, The Parachute Paradox, published by Kerber Verlag in 2016.

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Steven A. LeBlanc

Steven A. LeBlanc (born 1943) is an American archaeologist and former director of collections at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University's Peabody Museum.

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Steven A. Rosen

Steven A Rosen (Steve Rosen) is the Canada Chair in Near Eastern Archaeology in the Archaeological Division of the Department of Bible, Archaeology and Ancient Near East at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

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Steven Collins (archaeologist)

Steven Collins (born September 11, 1950) is an American archaeologist and a professor with the College of Archaeology at the unaccredited Trinity Southwest University in Albuquerque, New Mexico, an institution that states that biblical scripture is the "divinely inspired representation of reality given by God to humankind, speaking with absolute authority in all matters upon which it touches".

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Steven Erikson

Steven Erikson (born October 7, 1959) is the pseudonym of Steve Rune Lundin, a Canadian novelist, who was educated and trained as both an archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Steven Mithen

Steven Mithen is a Professor of Archaeology at the University of Reading.

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Stewart Ainsworth

Stewart Ainsworth (born 26 June 1951) is a British archaeological investigator who was regularly seen on Time Team, the Channel 4 archaeological television series.

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Stewart Copeland

Stewart Armstrong Copeland (born July 16, 1952) is an American musician and composer.

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Stillbay

The Stillbay (also Still bay) industry is the name given by archaeologists A. J. H. Goodwin and C. van Riet Lowe in 1929 to a mid-Palaeolithic stone tool manufacturing style after the site of Stilbaai (also called Still Bay) in South Africa where it was first described.

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Stilt house

Stilt houses are houses raised on piles over the surface of the soil or a body of water.

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Stine Rossel

Stine Rossel (1975 – October 20, 2007) was a Danish archaeologist.

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Stines Moss

Stines Moss is an elevated bog in the southwest upland area of the Orkney Mainland, Scotland.

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Stipshausen

Stipshausen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Stone Age

The Stone Age was a broad prehistoric period during which stone was widely used to make implements with an edge, a point, or a percussion surface.

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Stone Age Institute

The Stone Age Institute is an independent research center dedicated to the archaeological study of human origins and technological development.

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Stone carving

Stone carving is an activity where pieces of rough natural stone are shaped by the controlled removal of stone.

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Stone circles in the British Isles and Brittany

The stone circles in the British Isles and Brittany are a megalithic tradition of monuments consisting of standing stones arranged in rings.

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Stone quarries of ancient Egypt

The stone quarries of ancient Egypt once produced quality stone for the construction of decorative monuments such as sculptures and obelisks.

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Stone sculptures of horses and sheep

Stone sculptures of horses and sheep – are zoomorphic headstones, spread in the South Caucasus, Western Armenia (now the eastern part of Turkey) and Iranian Azerbaijan, the main part of which is dated back to the 13th-19th centuries.

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Stone Tape

The Stone Tape theory is the speculation that ghosts and hauntings are analogous to tape recordings, and that mental impressions during emotional or traumatic events can be projected in form of energy, "recorded" onto rocks and other items and "replayed" under certain conditions.

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Stone tool

A stone tool is, in the most general sense, any tool made either partially or entirely out of stone.

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Stonehenge

Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument in Wiltshire, England, west of Amesbury.

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Stonehenge in its landscape

Stonehenge in its landscape: Twentieth century excavations by Rosamund M. J. Cleal, Karen E. Walker and Rebecca Montague is an archaeological report on Stonehenge published in 1995.

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Storm drain

A storm drain, storm sewer (U.S. and Canada), surface water drain/sewer (United Kingdom), or stormwater drain (Australia and New Zealand) is designed to drain excess rain and ground water from impervious surfaces such as paved streets, car parks, parking lots, footpaths, sidewalks, and roofs.

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Stormwater

Stormwater, also spelled storm water, is water that originates during precipitation events and snow/ice melt.

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Strandloper peoples

The Strandlopers are a San-derived people who live by hunting and gathering food along the beaches of south-western Africa, originally from the Cape Colony to the Skeleton Coast.

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Stratigraphy

Stratigraphy is a branch of geology concerned with the study of rock layers (strata) and layering (stratification).

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Stratigraphy (archaeology)

Stratigraphy is a key concept to modern archaeological theory and practice.

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Streat

Streat is a village in the Lewes district of East Sussex, England, south-east of Burgess Hill and west of Lewes, close to remnant foothills just north of the South Downs National Park.

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Streetlife Museum of Transport

The Streetlife Museum of Transport is a transport museum located in Kingston upon Hull, England.

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Strmendolac

Strmendolac is a settlement near Trilj in the Split-Dalmatia County of Croatia.

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Stroganov family

The Stroganovs or Strogonovs (Стро́гановы, Стро́гоновы), referred to in French as Stroganoffs, were a family of highly successful Russian merchants, industrialists, landowners, and statesmen.

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Stroud District

Stroud is a local government district in Gloucestershire, England.

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Strubben-Kniphorstbos

The Strubben-Kniphorstbos is a nature reserve of 377 hectares, located between Anloo and Schipborg in the Dutch province of Drenthe.

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STS-58

STS-58 was a mission flown by Space Shuttle ''Columbia'' launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, on 18 October 1993.

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Stuart Piggott

Stuart Ernest Piggott,, FRSE FSA Scot (28 May 1910 – 23 September 1996) was a British archaeologist, best known for his work on prehistoric Wessex.

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Stuart Struever

Stuart McKee Struever (born 1931) is an American archaeologist and anthropologist best known for his contributions to the archaeology of the Woodland Period in the US midwest and for his leadership of archaeology research & education foundations.

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Stuntney

Stuntney is a village in East Cambridgeshire, located between Ely and Soham.

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Stuttgart-Center

Stuttgart-Center (Stuttgart-Mitte) is one of the five inner city districts of the Germany city of Stuttgart.

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Style (visual arts)

In the visual arts, style is a "...distinctive manner which permits the grouping of works into related categories" or "...any distinctive, and therefore recognizable, way in which an act is performed or an artifact made or ought to be performed and made".

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Su Bingqi

Su Bingqi (1909 – 30 June 1997) was a Chinese archaeologist and co-founder of Peking University's archaeology program.

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Sua Pan

The Sua Pan or Sowa Pan is a large natural topographic depression within the Makgadikgadi region of Botswana.

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Sub-Roman Britain

Sub-Roman Britain is the transition period between the Roman Empire's Crisis of the Third Century around CE 235 (and the subsequent collapse and end of Roman Britain), until the start of the Early Medieval period.

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Submerged Resources Center

The Submerged Resources Center is a unit within the United States National Park Service.

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Subneolithic

The term subneolithic is used in archaeological contexts to refer to peoples that, while being in contact with neolithic (farmer) groups, remain attached to their traditional hunter-gatherer practices, incorporating only some secondary neolithic elements (typically pottery).

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Suburban Baths (Pompeii)

The Suburban Baths are located in Pompeii, Italy.

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Sudan, Texas

Sudan is a city in Lamb County of West Texas, United States.

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Sudipto Das

Sudipto Das (born 12 July 1973) is an Indian author, IT professional and musician.

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Sue Hamilton (archaeologist)

Sue Hamilton is a British archaeologist who is a Professor of Prehistory at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.

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Sue Hendrickson

Susan Hendrickson (born December 2, 1949) is an American paleontologist.

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Sue O'Connor

Sue O'Connor is an Australian archaeologist and Distinguished Professor in the School of Culture, History & Language at the University of New England (Australia).

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Suez Canal

thumb The Suez Canal (قناة السويس) is an artificial sea-level waterway in Egypt, connecting the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea through the Isthmus of Suez.

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Suffolk

Suffolk is an East Anglian county of historic origin in England.

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Sugar Pot Site

The Sugar Pot Site is an archaeological site near Ochopee, Florida.

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Sulaymaniyah Museum

The Sulaymaniayh Museum (Kurdish: مۆزه‌خانه‌ی سلێمانی; Arabic: متحف السليمانية) is an archeological museum which is located within heart of the city of Sulaymaniyah, Sulaymaniyah Governorate, Kurdistan Region, Iraq.

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Sullivan's Island, South Carolina

Sullivan's Island is a town and island in Charleston County, South Carolina, United States, at the entrance to Charleston Harbor, with a population of 1,791 at the 2010 census.

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Sully Island

Sully Island (Welsh: Ynys Sili) is a small tidal island and Site of Special Scientific Interest at the hamlet of Swanbridge, Vale of Glamorgan, 400 yards off the northern coast of the Bristol Channel, midway between the towns of Penarth and Barry and 7 miles (11 kilometres) south of the Welsh capital city of Cardiff.

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Sumerian King List

The Sumerian King List is an ancient stone tablet originally recorded in the Sumerian language, listing kings of Sumer (ancient southern Iraq) from Sumerian and neighboring dynasties, their supposed reign lengths, and the locations of the kingship.

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Sumerian language

Sumerian (𒅴𒂠 "native tongue") is the language of ancient Sumer and a language isolate that was spoken in southern Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq).

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Summer Island

Summer Island is an island in Lake Michigan.

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Sumy

Sumy (Суми, Сумы) is a city in north-eastern Ukraine, and the capital of Sumy Oblast (region).

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Sundveda Hoard

The Sundveda Hoard (Sundvedaskatten) is a Viking Age hoard of 482 silver coins found in 2008 in Sundveda between Märsta and Sigtuna, not far from Stockholm in Sweden.

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Sune Lindqvist

Sune Lindqvist (20 March 1887 – 23 March 1976) was a Swedish archaeologist and scholar.

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Sunhild Kleingärtner

Sunhild Kleingärtner (born 1974) is a German historian and archaeologist, specialising in maritime history and maritime archaeology.

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Sunken Secrets

The Archaeology Discover Centre formerly Sunken Secrets, formerly the Underwater Archaeology Centre is a museum located in Fort Victoria on the Isle of Wight, England.

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Suor Orsola Benincasa University of Naples

The Suor Orsola Benincasa University of Naples (Università degli Studi Suor Orsola Benincasa - Napoli) is a private university located in Naples, Italy.

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Superburial

A superburial is similar to a mass grave, but is a term typically used by archaeologists to denote an area of dense burial activity without the negative connotations often associated with mass graves.

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Surkotada

Surkotada is an archaeological site located in Rapar Taluka of Kutch district, Gujarat, India which belongs to the Indus Valley Civilisation (IVC).

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Surrey Archaeological Society

Surrey Archaeological Society is a county archaeological society, founded in 1854 for "the investigation of subjects connected with the history and antiquities of the County of Surrey" in England.

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Surrey Historic Buildings Trust

The Surrey Historic Buildings Trust (founded in 1980, sometimes abbreviated SHBT) is a charitable organisation that works to preserve the architectural heritage of Surrey, in the south east of England.

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Survey (archaeology)

In archaeology, survey or field survey is a type of field research by which archaeologists (often landscape archaeologists) search for archaeological sites and collect information about the location, distribution and organization of past human cultures across a large area (e.g. typically in excess of one hectare, and often in excess of many km2).

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Survivorman

Survivorman is a Canadian-produced television program, broadcast in Canada on the Outdoor Life Network (OLN), and internationally on Discovery Channel and Science Channel.

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Susan D. Gillespie

Susan D. Gillespie (born 1952) is an American academic anthropologist and archaeologist, noted for her contributions to archaeological and ethnohistorical research on pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures, in particular the Aztec, Maya and Olmec.

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Susan E. Alcock

Susan Ellen Alcock is an American archaeologist specialising in survey archaeology and the archaeology of memory in the provinces of the Roman Empire.

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Susan Kane

Susan Kane is an American art historian and a pioneer of field archaeology.

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Susanne Osthoff

Susanne Kristina Osthoff (born March 7, 1962 in Munich) is a German archaeologist who had worked in Iraq since 1991 until being taken hostage there on November 25, 2005.

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Susquehannock

Susquehannock people, also called the Conestoga (by the English)The American Heritage Book of Indians, pages 188-189 were Iroquoian-speaking Native Americans who lived in areas adjacent to the Susquehanna River and its tributaries ranging from its upper reaches in the southern part of what is now New York (near the lands of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy), through eastern and central Pennsylvania West of the Poconos and the upper Delaware River (and the Delaware nations), with lands extending beyond the mouth of the Susquehanna in Maryland along the west bank of the Potomac at the north end of the Chesapeake Bay.

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Sussex Archaeological Society

The Sussex Archaeological Society, founded in 1846, is one of the oldest county-based archaeological societies in the UK.

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Sustainable Archaeology

Sustainable Archaeology (SA) is a digital archaeological research facility and collections repository that advances a sustainable form of practice and research archaeology in Ontario.

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Sutton Hoo

Sutton Hoo, near Woodbridge, Suffolk, is the site of two 6th- and early 7th-century cemeteries.

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Suvarnabhumi

(सुवर्णभूमि; Pali) is the name of a land mentioned in many ancient Buddhist sources such as the Mahavamsa, some stories of the Jataka tales, and Milinda Panha.

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Suzanna W. Miles

Suzanna ('Sue') Whitelaw Miles (Mount Carroll, Illinois, June 7, 1922 – Boston, April 10, 1966) was an American ethnohistorian, anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Suzanne Blier

Suzanne Preston Blier is an American art historian who currently serves as Allen Whitehill Clowes Professor of Fine Arts and Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University with appointments in both the History of Art and Architecture department and the department of African and African American studies.

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Svätý Jur

Svätý Jur (Sankt Georgen, Szentgyörgy, Saint George) is a small town northeast of Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia.

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Sven Hedin

Sven Anders Hedin, KNO1kl RVO,Wennerholm, Eric (1978) Sven Hedin - En biografi, Bonniers, Stockholm (19 February 1865 – 26 November 1952) was a Swedish geographer, topographer, explorer, photographer, travel writer, and illustrator of his own works.

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Sven Nilsson

Sven Nilsson (8 March 1787 – 30 November 1883) was a Swedish zoologist and archaeologist.

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Svetlana Pletnyova

Svetlana Alexandrovna Pletneva (also called Pletnyeva and Pletnyova Светлана Александровна Плетнева) (April 1, 1926 in Vyatka- 20 November 2008 in Moscow) was a Russian and Soviet archaeologist and historian.

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Swaffham, Norfolk

Swaffham is a market town and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk.

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Swansea

Swansea (Abertawe), is a coastal city and county, officially known as the City and County of Swansea (Dinas a Sir Abertawe) in Wales, UK.

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Swaraj Prakash Gupta

Swaraj Prakash Gupta (S. P. Gupta, 1931–2007) was a well-known Indian archaeologist and art historian.

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Swedish Institute in Rome

The Swedish Institute in Rome (Svenska Institutet i Rom, Istituto Svedese di studi classici a Roma) is a research institution that serves as the base for archaeological excavations and other scientific research in Italy.

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Swedish library classification system

The Swedish library classification system, (Klassifikationssystem för svenska bibliotek), or SAB system (SAB-systemet) is a library classification system for use in many public, school, and research libraries in Sweden.

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Swindon Museum

Swindon Museum is located in Swindon, Wiltshire, England.

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Swinside

Swinside, which is also known as Sunkenkirk and Swineshead, is a stone circle lying beside Swinside Fell, part of Black Combe in southern Cumbria, North West England.

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Swiss Center for Affective Sciences

The Swiss Centre for Affective Sciences (French title 'Centre Interfacultaire en Sciences Affectives' or 'CISA') is an interdisciplinary research centre based in Geneva.

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Sydney Fox

Sydney Fox is the title character on the television show Relic Hunter, played by Tia Carrere.

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Sylhet Division

Sylhet Division (সিলেট বিভাগ, ꠍꠤꠟꠐ ꠛꠤꠜꠣꠉ), also known as Greater Sylhet, is the northeastern division of Bangladesh, named after its main city, Sylhet.

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Sylvanus Morley

Sylvanus Griswold Morley (June 7, 1883September 2, 1948) was an American archaeologist, epigrapher, and Mayanist scholar who made significant contributions toward the study of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization in the early 20th century.

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Sylvia Benton

Sylvia Benton FSA, FSA Scot (18 August 1887 – 12 September 1985) was a British archaeologist.

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Symbolkeramik

Symbolkeramik is a name given by archaeologists to a type of pottery found at settlements from the Spanish Chalcolithic and early Bronze Age such as the site of Los Millares.

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Symbols of Power

Symbols of Power: At the Time of Stonehenge is a book dealing with the archaeology of hierarchical symbols in the British Isles during the Neolithic and Early Bronze Ages.

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Symonds Yat

Symonds Yat is a village in the Wye Valley and a popular tourist destination, straddling the River Wye and on the borders of the English counties of Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.

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Sympathetic magic

Sympathetic magic, also known as imitative magic, is a type of magic based on imitation or correspondence.

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Synaulia

Synaulia is a team of musicians, archeologists, paleorganologists and choreographers dedicated to the application of their historical research to ancient music and dance, in particular to the ancient Etruscan and Roman periods.

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Syria

Syria (سوريا), officially known as the Syrian Arab Republic (الجمهورية العربية السورية), is a country in Western Asia, bordering Lebanon and the Mediterranean Sea to the west, Turkey to the north, Iraq to the east, Jordan to the south, and Israel to the southwest.

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Syrian Archaeological Heritage Under Threat

Syrian Archaeological Heritage Under Threat, also known as Syrian Archaeological Heritage in Danger, Patrimoine Syrien or Le patrimoine archéologique syrien en danger (الآثار السورية في خطر) is a cultural heritage activist group that runs a Facebook page documenting the damage to Syrian and World Heritage during the Syrian Civil War.

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Systematic survey

Systematic survey or extensive survey is the archaeological technique of detailed examination of an area for the purpose of recording the location and significance of archaeological resources.

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Systems theory in archaeology

Systems theory in archaeology is the application of systems theory and systems thinking in archaeology.

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Szeged Faculty of Arts

The Faculty of Arts of the University of Szeged.

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T. B. L. Webster

Thomas Bertram Lonsdale Webster (3 July 1905 – 31 May 1974) was an English archaeologist and Classicist, known for his studies of Greek comedy.

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T. C. Lethbridge

Thomas Charles Lethbridge (23 March 1901 – 30 September 1971), better known as T. C. Lethbridge, was an English archaeologist, parapsychologist, and explorer.

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T. D. Kendrick

Sir Thomas Downing "T.

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T. E. Lawrence

Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence, (16 August 1888 – 19 May 1935) was a British archaeologist, military officer, diplomat, and writer.

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T. G. Aravamuthan

Thirukannangudi G. Aravamuthan (1890 – 9 May 1970) was an Indian archaeologist and numismatist.

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T. N. Ramachandran

T.N. Ramachandran (1901–1973) was an Indian art historian, artist, archaeologist and a Sanskrit scholar, specialising in the study and exposition of various aspects of Indian art.

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T. O. Fuller State Park

T.O. Fuller State Park is a state park in the city of Memphis, Tennessee, USA.

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T. T. Paterson

Doctor Thomas Thomson Paterson (1909–1994), archaeologist, palaeontologist, geologist, glaciologist, geographer, anthropologist, ethnologist, sociologist, and world authority on administration, was curator of the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge from 1937 to 1948.

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Taínos (film)

Taínos is a 2005 Puerto Rican film written and directed by Benjamín López.

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Taïeb Baccouche

Taïeb Baccouche (born 1944) is a Tunisian politician who has been Secretary-General of the Arab Maghreb Union since 2016.

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Table for Five

Table for Five is a 1983 American theatrical dramatic film, starring Jon Voight and Richard Crenna.

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Table of years in archaeology

The following entries cover events related to the study of archaeology which occurred in the listed year.

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Tacna

Tacna is a city in southern Peru and the regional capital of the Tacna Region.

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Tacna Region

Tacna is the southernmost region Peru.

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Tadeusz Andrzejewski

Tadeusz Andrzejewski (1923–1961) was a Polish archeologist and Egyptologist.

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Tadeusz Czesław Malinowski

Tadeusz Czesław Malinowski (born April 8, 1932, in Poznań, Poland) is a Polish scientist and archaeologist specialising in the Bronze Age and early Iron Age.

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Tadeusz Sulimirski

Tadeusz Sulimirski (1 April 1898 – 20 June 1983) was a Polish historian and archaeologist, who emigrated to the United Kingdom soon after the outbreak of World War II in 1939.

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TAG Manchester

TAG Manchester is an archaeology conference organized by the Theoretical Archaeology Group that took place in Manchester from December 15 to 17, 2014.

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Taha Baqir

Taha Baqir (طه باقر) (born 1912 in Babylon, Iraq – 28 February 1984) was an Iraqi archaeologist, author, cuneiformist, linguist, historian, and former curator of the National Museum of Iraq.

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Tahsin Özgüç

Tahsin Özgüç (1916–2005) was an eminent Turkish field archaeologist.

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Tahuata

Tahuata is the smallest of the inhabited Marquesas Islands, in French Polynesia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean.

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Tajhat Palace

Tajhat Palace, Tajhat Rajbari, is a historic palace of Bangladesh, located in Tajhat, Rangpur.

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Takahito, Prince Mikasa

was a member of the Imperial House of Japan.

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Takalik Abaj

Tak'alik Ab'aj is a pre-Columbian archaeological site in Guatemala.

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Tako (band)

Tako (Тако, trans. That Way) was a former Yugoslav progressive rock band from Belgrade.

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Talheim Death Pit

The Talheim Death Pit (German: Massaker von Talheim), discovered in 1983, was a mass grave found in a Linear Pottery Culture settlement, also known as a Linearbandkeramik (LBK) culture.

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Talietumu

Talietumu or more correctly Kolo Nui is an archaeological site in Wallis and Futuna in the southwestern part of the Pacific Ocean.

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Talisman (Alpha Flight)

Talisman (Elizabeth Twoyoungmen) is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

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Talisman (book series)

Talisman is a series of four children's books written by Allan Frewin Jones and published in 2005.

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Tallinn

Tallinn (or,; names in other languages) is the capital and largest city of Estonia.

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Talpiot Tomb

The Talpiot Tomb (or Talpiyot Tomb) is a rock-cut tomb discovered in 1980 in the East Talpiot neighborhood, five kilometers (three miles) south of the Old City in East Jerusalem.

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Tamara Eidelman

Tamara Natanovna Eidelman (Тамара Натановна Эйдельман) is a Russian historian, honored teacher of Russia, translator, blogger and an editor for Russian Life.

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Tamassos

Tamassos (Greek: Ταμασσός) or Tamasos (Greek: Τἀμασος) – names Latinized as Tamassus or Tamasus – was a city-kingdom in Cyprus.

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Tambomachay

Tambomachay (possibly from Quechua tampu inn, guest house, mach'ay cave, or machay drunkenness, to get drunk or "spindle with thread")Diccionario Quechua - Español - Quechua, Academía Mayor de la Lengua Quechua, Gobierno Regional Cusco, Cusco 2005 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary) is an archaeological site associated with the Inca Empire, located near Cusco, Peru.

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Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department

Tamil Nadu Archaeology Department or Tamil Nadu State Department of Archaeology is the archaeology department of the Government of Tamil Nadu.

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Tampa, Florida

Tampa is a major city in, and the county seat of, Hillsborough County, Florida, United States.

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Tanager Expedition

The Tanager Expedition was a series of five biological surveys of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands conducted in partnership between the Bureau of Biological Survey and the Bishop Museum, with the assistance of the U.S. Navy.

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Tang Wei

Tang Wei (born 7 October 1979) is a Chinese actress.

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Tangeh Bolaghi

Tangeh Bolāghi, also transliterated as Tange-ye Bolāghi (تنگه بلاغی), or Bolāghi Gorge, is an archaeologically significant valley consisting of 130 ancient settlements, dating back to the period between 5000 BCE and the Sassanian dynastic era (224-651 CE).

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Tania Ghirshman

Tania Ghirshman (1900–1984), born Antoinette Levienne, was a French archaeologist and restorationist.

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Tantiusques

Tantiusques ("Tant-E-oos-kwiss") is a open space reservation and historic site registered with the National Register of Historic Places.

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Taos Pueblo

Taos Pueblo (or Pueblo de Taos) is an ancient pueblo belonging to a Taos-speaking (Tiwa) Native American tribe of Puebloan people.

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Taparura

Taparura is a location within the city of Sfax, Tunisia.

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Taphonomy

Taphonomy is the study of how organisms decay and become fossilized.

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Taposiris Magna

The name Taposiris Magna denotes the name of a city as well as an Egyptian temple of the same name at the same location established by Pharaoh Ptolemy II Philadelphus between 280 and 270 BCE.

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Tapu Javeri

Tapu Javeri (Urdu:; born Mustapha Farabi Javeri on 5 May 1965) is a Pakistani fashion and art photographer, radio host and jewellery designer.

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Tara Chand (archaeologist)

Tara Chand was an Indian archaeologist and historian specialising in the Ancient History and Culture of India.

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Tardenois

The Tardenois is today a natural region (région naturelle) of France.

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Tarim Basin

The Tarim Basin is an endorheic basin in northwest China occupying an area of about.

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Tarnac Nine

The Tarnac Nine are a French group of nine alleged anarchist saboteurs: Mathieu Burnel, Julien Coupat, Bertrand Deveaux, Manon Glibert, Gabrielle Hallez, Elsa Hauck, Yildune Lévy, Benjamin Rosoux and Aria Thomas.

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Tarsus Museum

Tarsus Museum is an archaeology and ethnography museum in Tarsus, Mersin Province, in southern Turkey.

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Tarxien Temples

The Tarxien Temples (It-Tempji ta' Ħal Tarxien) are an archaeological complex in Tarxien, Malta.

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Tassili n'Ajjer

Tassili n'Ajjer (Tasili n Ajjer, طاسيلي ناجر; "Plateau of the Rivers") is a national park in the Sahara desert, located on a vast plateau in south-east Algeria.

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Tatabánya

Tatabánya (Totiserkolonie) is a city of 65,849 inhabitants in northwestern Hungary, in the Central Transdanubian region.

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Tatiana Štefanovičová

Tatiana Štefanovičová (10 March 1934, Bratislava, Czechoslovakia) is a Slovak archaeologist and historian, one of leading experts in early history of Slovakia.

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Tatiana Proskouriakoff

Tat’yana Avenirovna Proskuriakova (Татья́на Авени́ровна Проскуряко́ва) (– August 30, 1985) was a Russian-American Mayanist scholar and archaeologist who contributed significantly to the deciphering of Maya hieroglyphs, the writing system of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization of Mesoamerica.

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Tatiana Warsher

Tatiana Warsher (1880–1960) was a Russian archaeologist known for her studies of Pompeii, especially her 40-volume Codex Topographicus Pompeianus.

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Tato Bores

Mauricio Borensztein (27 April 1927 – 11 January 1996), known by the stage name Tato Bores, was an Argentine film, theatre and television comedian, who specialized in political humor.

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Tatul

Tatul (Татул, the local name for Datura stramonium) is a village in Momchilgrad municipality, Kardzhali Province located in the Eastern Rhodopes in southern Bulgaria.

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Tauriana

Tauriana or Taureana (Taurianum in Latin, Ταυρανία in Greek) is an ancient city of the Bruttii which was located in the southern part of Calabria, in present Taurianova, Reggio Calabria province.

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Tazza (cup)

A tazza (Italian, "cup", plural tazze) is a wide but shallow saucer-like dish either mounted on a stem and foot or on a foot alone.

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Târnăveni

Târnăveni (Hungarian: Dicsőszentmárton,; German: Sankt Martin, earlier Marteskirch) is a city in Mureș County, central Romania.

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Téréba Togola

Dr.

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Túathal Techtmar

Túathal Techtmar ("the legitimate"), son of Fíachu Finnolach, was a High King of Ireland, according to medieval Irish legend and historical tradition.

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Tărtăria tablets

The Tărtăria tablets /tərtəria/ are three tablets, discovered in 1961 by archaeologist Nicolae Vlassa at a Neolithic site in the village of Tărtăria (about from Alba Iulia), in Romania.

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Ted Danson

Edward Bridge "Ted" Danson III (born December 29, 1947) is an American actor and producer who played the lead character Sam Malone on the NBC sitcom Cheers, Jack Holden in the films Three Men and a Baby and Three Men and a Little Lady, and Dr.

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Ted Hughes

Edward James Hughes (17 August 1930 – 28 October 1998) was an English poet and children's writer.

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Tejo Power Station

The Tejo Power Station was a thermoelectric power plant owned by the Companhias Reunidas de Gás e Electricidade (CRGE – United Gas and Electric Companies), which supplied power to the city and entire Lisbon region.

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Tekirdağ Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography

Tekirdağ Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography (Tekirdağ Arkeoloji ve Etnografya Müzesi), shortly Tekirdağ Museum, is a national museum in Tekirdağ, Turkey, exhibiting archaeological artifacts found in and around the province, as well as ethnographical items related to the region's cultural history.

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Tekoa, Gush Etzion

Tekoa (תְּקוֹעַ) is an Israeli settlement organized as a community settlement in the West Bank, located 20 km northeast of Hebron, 16 km south of Jerusalem and in the immediate vicinity of the Palestinian village of Tuqu'.

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Tel Afek

Tel Afek, (תל אפק), also spelled Aphek and Afeq, is an archaeological site located in the coastal hinterland of the Ein Afek Nature Reserve, east of Kiryat Bialik, Israel.

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Tel Be'er Sheva

Tel Sheva (Hebrew) or Tell es-Seba (Arabic) is an archeological site in southern Israel believed to be the remains of the biblical town of Beersheba.

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Tel Kabri

Tel Kabri (תֵל כַבְרִי; تَلْ ألْقَهوَة, Tell al-Qahweh, "the mound of coffee") is an archaeological site of a tell (hill city), containing one of the largest Middle Bronze (MB) Age (2,100–1,550 BC) Canaanite palaces in ancient Israel, and the largest such palace excavated as of 2014.

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Tel Tzora

Tel Tzora, (תל צרעה), is a tell and Israeli archaeological site west of Jerusalem near the modern-day kibbutz of the same name, and more commonly identified with the deserted Arab village of Sar'a.

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Tell (archaeology)

In archaeology, a tell, or tel (derived from تَل,, 'hill' or 'mound'), is an artificial mound formed from the accumulated refuse of people living on the same site for hundreds or thousands of years.

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Tell al-`Ubaid Copper Lintel

The Tell al-`Ubaid Copper Lintel or Imdugud Relief is a large copper panel found at the ancient Sumerian city of Tell al-`Ubaid in southern Iraq.

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Tell Keisan

Tell Keisan, تل كيسون (Arabic name meaning “the mound of treachery”) or Tel Kisson, תל כיסון (Hebrew name), is an archaeological site located 8 km from the Mediterranean coast in the Galilee region of Israel between Haifa and Akko.

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Tell Qasile

Tell Qasile is an archaeological site in Tel Aviv, Israel.

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Tell Tweini

Tell Tweini, sometimes known as Gibala, is an archaeological site located 1 kilometre east of the modern city of Jableh, Syria.

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Telos (Doctor Who)

Telos is a fictional planet from the British science fiction television series Doctor Who.

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Temasek

Temasek (also spelt Temasik) is an early recorded name of a settlement on the site of modern Singapore.

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Temazcal

A temazcal is a type of sweat lodge which originated with pre-Hispanic Indigenous peoples in Mesoamerica.

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Temple (novel)

Temple is a thriller novel written by Australian author Matthew Reilly and first published in 1999.

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Temple of Eshmun

The Temple of Eshmun (معبد أشمون) is an ancient place of worship dedicated to Eshmun, the Phoenician god of healing.

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Temple of Flame

Temple of Flame is a gamebook by Dave Morris and Oliver Johnson from the Golden Dragon gamebook collection.

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Temple of Isthmia

The Temple of Isthmia is an ancient Greek temple on the Isthmus of Corinth dedicated to the god Poseidon and built in the Archaic Period.

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Temple of the Cross Complex

The Temple of the Cross is the largest and most significant pyramid within a complex of temples at the Maya ruins of Palenque in the state of Chiapas in Mexico.

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Temple of the Inscriptions

The Temple of the Inscriptions (Classic Maya: Bʼolon Yej Teʼ Naah "House of the Nine Sharpened Spears") is the largest Mesoamerican stepped pyramid structure at the pre-Columbian Maya civilization site of Palenque, located in the modern-day state of Chiapas, Mexico.

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Temple of the Medes

Temple of the Medes is a temple constructed by Medes located in UNESCO world heritage site the ancient site of Bisotun city in Kermanshah Province, Iran.

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Templeborough

Templeborough (historically Templebrough) is a suburb of Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England.

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Temples of Mount Hermon

The Temples of Mount Hermon are around thirty Roman shrines and Roman temples that are dispersed around the slopes of Mount Hermon in Lebanon, Israel and Syria.

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Temples of the Beqaa Valley

The Temples of the Beqaa Valley are a number of shrines and Roman temples that are dispersed around the Beqaa Valley in Lebanon.

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Tenby Museum and Art Gallery

Tenby Museum and Art Gallery, located in Tenby, Pembrokeshire, South West Wales, is the oldest independent museum in Wales.

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Tennessee Division of Archaeology

The Tennessee Division of Archaeology (TDOA) is a division of the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation responsible for managing prehistoric archaeological sites on lands owned by the U.S. state of Tennessee, conducting archaeological excavations and research, informing the public about Tennessee’s prehistoric past, and coordinating with other state agencies regarding archaeological preservation issues.

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Tensas Parish, Louisiana

Tensas Parish (Paroisse des Tensas) is a parish located in the northeastern section of the State of Louisiana; its eastern border is the Mississippi River.

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Teodor Narbutt

Teodor Narbutt (Teodoras Narbutas; 8 November 1784 – 27 November 1864) was a Polish–Lithuanian romantic historian and military engineer in service of the Russian Empire.

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Teodoro Casana Robles

Teodoro Casana Robles (April 1, 1900 - April 21, 1986) was a Peruvian lawyer, historian, journalist, archaeologist, photographer and geographer.

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Teofil Żebrawski

Teofil Żebrawski (1800–1887) was a Polish mathematician, bibliographer, architect, biologist, archeologist, cartographer and geodesist; an erudite and polymath.

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Teouma

Teouma is a major archaeological site from Teouma Bay on the island of Éfaté in Vanuatu.

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Tephrochronology

Tephra horizons in south-central Iceland. The thick and light coloured layer at the height of the volcanologist's hands is rhyolitic tephra from Hekla. Tephrochronology is a geochronological technique that uses discrete layers of tephra—volcanic ash from a single eruption—to create a chronological framework in which paleoenvironmental or archaeological records can be placed.

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Tequendama

Tequendama is a preceramic and ceramic archaeological site located southeast of Soacha, Cundinamarca, Colombia, a couple of kilometers east of Tequendama Falls.

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Tequesta

The Tequesta (also Tekesta, Tegesta, Chequesta, Vizcaynos) Native American tribe, at the time of first European contact, occupied an area along the southeastern Atlantic coast of Florida.

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Terence Mitford

Terence Bruce Mitford FBA FSA (sometimes known as Terence Bruce-Mitford) (11 May 1905 – 8 November 1978) was a Scottish archaeologist and classicist.

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Terezín

Terezín (Theresienstadt) is a former military fortress composed of citadel and adjacent walled garrison town of Litoměřice District, in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic.

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Terracotta

Terracotta, terra cotta or terra-cotta (Italian: "baked earth", from the Latin terra cocta), a type of earthenware, is a clay-based unglazed or glazed ceramic, where the fired body is porous.

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Terror from the Year 5000

Terror from the Year 5000 (a.k.a. Cage of Doom in the UK) is a 1958 independently made American black-and-white science fiction film, produced by Robert J. Gurney Jr., Samuel Z. Arkoff, James H. Nicholson, and Gene Searchinger, directed by Robert J. Gurney Jr., that stars Ward Costello, Joyce Holden, John Stratton, Salome Jens, and Fred Herrick.

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Teso Dos Bichos

"Teso Dos Bichos" is the eighteenth episode of the third season of the science fiction television series The X-Files.

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Tessa Wheeler

Tessa Verney Wheeler (27 March 1893 – 15 April 1936) was an archaeologist who made a significant contribution to excavation techniques and contributed to the setting up of major British archaeological institutions after the Second World War.

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Teti

Teti, less commonly known as Othoes, read as Tata and pronounced Atat or Athath, was the first pharaoh of the Sixth dynasty of Egypt.

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Texas

Texas (Texas or Tejas) is the second largest state in the United States by both area and population.

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Texas Canyon

Texas Canyon is located in Cochise County, Arizona about 20 miles east of Benson on Interstate 10 and lies between the Little Dragoon Mountains on the north and the Dragoon Mountains to the south.

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Texas Historical Commission

The Texas Historical Commission is an agency dedicated to historic preservation within the state of Texas.

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Texas Tech University College of Arts & Sciences

The Texas Tech University College of Arts & Sciences was founded in 1925 as one of Texas Tech University's four original colleges.

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Texas–Indian wars

The Texas–Indian wars were a series of 19th-century conflicts between settlers in Texas and the Southern Plains Indians.

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Text publication society

A text publication society is a learned society which publishes (either as its sole function, or as a principal function) scholarly editions of old works of historical or literary interest, or archival documents.

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Thallichtenberg

Thallichtenberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Thames Discovery Programme

The Thames Discovery Programme is a community archaeology project, focusing on the archaeology of the River Thames on the Tideway.

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Thanatology

Thanatology is the scientific study of death.

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Thank God You're Here (U.S. TV series)

Thank God You're Here is a partially improvised comedy television program, based on the Australian TV show, broadcast by NBC.

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Thanthirimale

Thanthirimale (also spelled as Tantirimale) is an old village in the Anuradhapura District of Sri Lanka.

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Tharro Hills

The Tharro Hills are located in Sindh, Pakistan.

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Théodore Reinach

Théodore Reinach (July 3, 1860 – October 28, 1928) was a French archaeologist, mathematician, lawyer, papyrologist, philologist, epigrapher, historian, numismatist, musicologist, professor, and politician.

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Théophile Corret de la Tour d'Auvergne

Théophile Malo Corret de la Tour d'Auvergne (23 November 1743 – 28 June 1800) was a French officer named by Napoleon "first grenadier of France".

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Théophile Homolle

Jean Théophile Homolle (19 December 1848, Paris – 13 June 1925, Paris) was a French archaeologist and classical philologist.

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The 3rd Degree (radio series)

The 3rd Degree (sometimes written as The Third Degree) is a British quiz show broadcast on BBC Radio 4, hosted by comedian Steve Punt and made by Pozzitive Productions.

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The Adventures of Indiana Jones Role-Playing Game

The Adventures of Indiana Jones Role-Playing Game is a role-playing game based on the Indiana Jones franchise.

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The Age of Misrule

The Age of Misrule is a three-book modern fantasy novel series, written by Mark Chadbourn.

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The Archaeological Journal

The Archaeological Journal is a peer-reviewed academic journal for archaeological and architectural reports and articles.

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The Archaeology of Death and Burial

The Archaeology of Death and Burial is an archaeological study by the English archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson, then a professor at the University of Sheffield.

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The Archaeology of Hindu Ritual

The Archaeology of Hindu Ritual: Temples and the Establishment of the Gods is an archaeological study focusing in on the early development of Hinduism within the Gupta Empire between the 4th and 6th centuries CE.

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The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic

The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic is an archaeological study of the material evidence for ritual and magical practices in Europe, containing a particular emphasis on London and South East England.

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The Archaeology of Shamanism

The Archaeology of Shamanism is an academic anthology edited by the English archaeologist Neil Price which was first published by Routledge in 2001.

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The Arrow Maker

The Arrow Maker is a play by Mary Hunter Austin meant to reflect American Indian life, especially of the Paiutes, in the Sierra Nevada of the United States.

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The Artefact (journal)

The Artefact is a refereed journal published annually by the Archaeological and Anthropological Society of Victoria.

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The arts

The arts refers to the theory and physical expression of creativity found in human societies and cultures.

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The Aryabhata Clan

The Aryabhata Clan is the second novel by the Indian author Sudipto Das, published by Niyogi Books in December 2017.

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The Beast (Revelation)

The Beast (Θηρίον, Thērion) may refer to one of two beasts described in the Book of Revelation.

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The Beauty of Durrës

The Beauty of Durrës (also called The Beautiful Maiden of Durrës or The Belle of Durrës) is a polychromatic mosaic of the 4th century BC and is the most ancient and important mosaic discovered in Albania.

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The Bible Unearthed

The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts, a book published in 2001, discusses the archaeology of Israel and its relationship to the origins and content of the Hebrew Bible.

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The Bluff Point Stoneworks

The Bluff Point Stoneworks are a prehistoric structure located in the town of Jerusalem, New York, at the crux of Keuka Lake in the Finger Lakes Region of western New York State.

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The Body (2001 film)

The Body is a 2001 English-language political thriller drama film based on a novel by Richard Sapir, and starring Antonio Banderas and Olivia Williams.

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The Body (Sapir novel)

The Body (1983) is a mystery/thriller written by Richard Ben Sapir, co-author of Destroyer series.

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The Bog People

The Bog People: Iron-Age Man Preserved is an archaeological study of the bog bodies of Northern Europe written by the Danish archaeologist P.V. Glob.

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The Bone Forest

The Bone Forest is a collection of fantasy short stories by British writer Robert Holdstock, published in 1991 (UK) and 1992 (US).

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The Bush Baby

, shortened as The Bush Baby, is the title of a 1992 anime series consisting of forty 25-minute episodes.

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The Cabinet of Curiosities

The Cabinet of Curiosities is a thriller novel by American writers Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, released on June 3, 2002 by Grand Central Publishing.

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The Caves of Ægissíða

The caves of Ægissíða are a series of ancient man-made sandstone caves located at the farm Ægissíða on the bank of the river Ytri-Rangá in the southern part of Iceland.

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The Center for Public Policy Analysis

The Center for Public Policy Analysis (CPPA), or Centre for Public Policy Analysis, was established in Washington, D.C. in 1988 and describes itself as a non-profit, non-partisan, think tank and research organization.

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The Chaos Code

The Chaos Code is a 2007 science-fiction/fantasy novel for young teenagers by British author Justin Richards.

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The Chase (Star Trek: The Next Generation)

"The Chase" is the 146th episode of the syndicated American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, the 20th episode of the sixth season.

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The Collection (Lincolnshire)

The Collection is the county museum and gallery for Lincolnshire in England.

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The Compleat Sculptor

The Compleat Sculptor, Inc., was established in New York City in 1995 as a comprehensive source of sculptural materials and tools.

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The Curse of King Tut's Tomb (2006 film)

The Curse of King Tut's Tomb (also known as The Curse of King Tut) is a 2006 fantasy adventure television film directed by Russell Mulcahy, starring Casper Van Dien, Leonor Varela, and Jonathan Hyde.

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The Dark Goddess

The Dark Goddess is a novel by French American novelist Marvin H. Albert.

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The Dæmons

The Dæmons is the fifth and final serial of the eighth season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in five weekly parts on BBC1 from 22 May to 19 June 1971.

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The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Christian Myth

The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Christian myth is a 1979 book about the Dead Sea Scrolls, Essenes and early Christianity that proposes the non-existence of Jesus Christ.

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The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex

The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex is a book by English naturalist Charles Darwin, first published in 1871, which applies evolutionary theory to human evolution, and details his theory of sexual selection, a form of biological adaptation distinct from, yet interconnected with, natural selection.

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The Dig

The Dig is a point-and-click adventure game developed by LucasArts and released in 1995 as a CD-ROM for PC and Macintosh computers.

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The Dominick

The Dominick, formerly the Trump SoHo, is a $450 million, 46-story, 391-unit hotel condominium located at 246 Spring Street at the corner of Varick Street in the Hudson Square neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.

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The Dukes (TV series)

The Dukes is a 30-minute Saturday morning animated series based on the live-action television series The Dukes of Hazzard which aired on CBS from February 5 to October 29, 1983.

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The Dune Encyclopedia

The Dune Encyclopedia is a 1984 collection of essays written by Willis E. McNelly and multiple other contributors as a companion to Frank Herbert's ''Dune'' series of science fiction novels.

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The Dunwich Horror

"The Dunwich Horror" is a horror short story by American writer H. P. Lovecraft.

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The Egypt Game

The Egypt Game (1967) is a Newbery Honor-winning novel by Zilpha Keatley Snyder.

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The Ekkos Clan

The Ekkos Clan (978-14-95229-78-7) is a mystery novel written by Indian author Sudipto Das, based on historical research.

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The English Patient (film)

The English Patient is a 1996 American romantic war drama film directed by Anthony Minghella from his own script based on the novel of the same name by Michael Ondaatje and produced by Saul Zaentz.

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The Eternal Adam

The Eternal Adam (L'Éternel Adam) is a short novelette by Jules Verne recounting the progressive fall of a group of survivors into barbarism following an apocalypse.

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The Evolution of God

The Evolution of God is a 2009 book by Robert Wright, in which the author explores the history of the concept of God in the three Abrahamic religions through a variety of means, including archeology, history, theology, and evolutionary psychology. The patterns which link Judaism, Christianity, and Islam and the ways in which they have changed their concepts over time are explored as one of the central themes. One of the conclusions of the book that Wright tries to make is a reconciliation between science and religion. He also speculates on the future of the concept of God.

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The Exodus

The exodus is the founding myth of Jews and Samaritans.

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The Exodus: sources and parallels

The scholarly consensus is that there was no Exodus as described in the Bible.

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The Exorcist (film series)

The Exorcist is an American horror franchise consisting of five installments based on the novel The Exorcist, created by William Blatty, and part of The Exorcist franchise.

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The Falling Woman

The Falling Woman is a 1986 contemporary psychological fantasy novel by Pat Murphy.

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The Game of Life: Twists & Turns

The Game of Life: Twists & Turns is a 2007 version of the classic board game The Game of Life.

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The Gaze of the Gorgon

The Gaze of the Gorgon is a film-poem created in 1992 by English poet and playwright Tony Harrison which examines the politics of conflict in the 20th century using the Gorgon and her petrifying gaze as a metaphor for the actions of the elites during wars and other crises and the muted response and apathy these traumatic events generate among the masses seemingly petrified by modern Gorgons gazing at them from pediments constructed by the elites.

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The Gentleman's Magazine

The Gentleman's Magazine was founded in London, England, by Edward Cave in January 1731.

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The Goatstones

The Goatstones is a Bronze-Age four-poster stone circle located near Ravensheugh Crags in Northumberland, England.

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The Govan Stones

The Govan Stones are early medieval carved stones displayed at the Govan Old Parish Church in Glasgow, Scotland.

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The Greatest Pharaohs

The Greatest Pharaohs is a 1997 American educational documentary film about Ancient Egypt distributed by A&E and narrated by Frank Langella with commentary by experts in the field.

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The Guide

The Guide is a 1958 novel written in English by the Indian author R. K. Narayan.

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The Heartland Series

The Heartland Series is a series of television programs about the culture of Appalachia, produced by WBIR-TV of Knoxville, Tennessee, over the 25-year period 1984 through 2009.

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The Heroic Age (journal)

The Heroic Age: A Journal of Early Medieval Northwestern Europe is a peer-reviewed academic journal founded in 1998, with first issue having been published during spring/summer 1999.

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The Holy Pearl

The Holy Pearl is a 2011 Chinese television series starring Gillian Chung as the daughter of an archaeologist.

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The Immoralist (play)

The Immoralist is a play adapted from the novel by André Gide by Augustus and Ruth Goetz.

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The Institute for Cultural Research

The Institute for Cultural Research (ICR) was a London-based, UK-registered educational charity,The Institute for Cultural Research's UK registered charity number is 313295.

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The Jesus Scroll

The Jesus Scroll was a best-selling book first published in 1972 and written by Australian author Donovan Joyce.

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The Jewel of Seven Stars

The Jewel of Seven Stars is a horror novel by Irish writer Bram Stoker, first published by Heinemann in 1903.

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The Joshua Files

The Joshua Files is a thriller book series aimed at pre-teens/teenagers written by British author M. G. Harris.

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The Journey Museum and Learning Center

The Journey Museum and Learning Center is a museum in Rapid City, South Dakota, United States with of gardens.

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The Krofft Supershow

The Krofft Supershow is a Saturday morning children's variety show, produced by Sid and Marty Krofft.

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The Last Egyptian

The Last Egyptian: A Romance of the Nile is a novel written by L. Frank Baum, famous as the creator of the Land of Oz.

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The Locusts

The Locusts, also known as the Peter Eltinge House, is a 19th-century brick Federal style house built in 1826 located on Plains Road in the Town of New Paltz, New York, United States, two miles (3 km) south of the village of New Paltz.

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The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone

The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone is a film written by Bill Muir based on the children's book of the same name.

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The Lost Tomb of Jesus

The Lost Tomb of Jesus is a documentary co-produced and first broadcast on the Discovery Channel and Vision TV in Canada on March 4, 2007, covering the discovery of the Talpiot Tomb.

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The Man from Earth

The Man from Earth is a 2007 American drama science fiction film written by Jerome Bixby and directed by Richard Schenkman.

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The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike

The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike is a realist, non-science fiction novel by American writer Philip K. Dick.

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The Man-Eating Myth

The Man-Eating Myth: Anthropology and Anthropophagy is an influential anthropological study of socially sanctioned cultural cannibalism across the world, which casts a critical perspective on the existence of such practices.

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The Mansion, Berkhamsted

The Mansion, Berkhamsted is a historic property on Castle Hill in Berkhamsted.

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The Meeting Point

Sabirni centar (The Meeting Point) is a 1989 Yugoslavian fantasy/comedy-drama film directed by Goran Marković, starring Rade Marković, Bogdan Diklić, Dragan Nikolić, Mirjana Karanović and Anica Dobra.

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The Megalithic Portal

The Megalithic Portal is a web resource dedicated to prehistoric archaeology and closely related subjects.

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The Megaliths of Upper Laos

The Megaliths of Upper Laos (orig. French: Les Megaliths du Haut Laos) is a 1930 work of archaeology by Madeleine Colani, examining and cataloging approximately ten thousand megaliths in Upper Laos.

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The Methos Chronicles

The Methos Chronicles is a 2001 animated internet Flash series based on Methos, a character drawn from Highlander: The Series.

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The Mind in the Cave

The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art is a 2002 study of Upper Palaeolithic European rock art written by the archaeologist David Lewis-Williams, then a professor at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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The Modern Antiquarian

The Modern Antiquarian: A Pre-Millennial Odyssey Through Megalithic Britain is a bestselling and critically acclaimed guide book written by Julian Cope, published in 1998.

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The Mole People (film)

The Mole People is a 1956 black-and-white science fiction film distributed by Universal International, which was produced by William Alland, directed by Virgil W. Vogel, and stars John Agar, Hugh Beaumont, and Cynthia Patrick.

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The Morals of Marcus

The Morals of Marcus is a 1935 British comedy film directed by Miles Mander and starring Lupe Vélez, Ian Hunter and Adrianne Allen.

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The Mummy (1932 film)

The Mummy is a 1932 American pre-Code horror film directed by Karl Freund.

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The Mummy (1959 film)

The Mummy is a 1959 British horror film, directed by Terence Fisher and starring Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing.

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The Mummy (2017 film)

The Mummy is a 2017 American action-adventure film directed by Alex Kurtzman and written by David Koepp, Christopher McQuarrie and Dylan Kussman, with a story by Kurtzman, Jon Spaihts and Jenny Lumet.

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The Mummy, or Ramses the Damned

The Mummy, or Ramses the Damned is a 1989 horror novel by American writer Anne Rice.

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The Mysterious Cities of Gold

The Mysterious Cities of Gold, originally released in Japan as and in France as Les Mystérieuses Cités d'or, is a French-Japanese animated series co-produced by DIC Entertainment and Studio Pierrot.

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The Naked Archaeologist

The Naked Archaeologist is a television show produced for VisionTV in Canada and History International in the US, that is hosted and prepared by the Emmy Award–winning journalist Simcha Jacobovici together with Avri Gilad.

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The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art

The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art is a Chinese mathematics book, composed by several generations of scholars from the 10th–2nd century BCE, its latest stage being from the 2nd century CE.

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The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles

The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles: Their Nature and Legacy is a book of religious history and archaeology written by the English historian Ronald Hutton, first published by Blackwell in 1991.

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The Pines Catholic Camp

The Pines Catholic Camp, located in Big Sandy, Texas outside of Tyler and 2 hours east of Dallas, is a Catholic summer camp and retreat center.

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The Prehistoric Society

The Prehistoric Society is an international learned society devoted to the study of the human past from the earliest times until the emergence of written history.

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The Pumaman

The Pumaman (L'uomo puma) is a 1980 Italian superhero film co-written and directed by Alberto De Martino, starring Walter George Alton as the Pumaman and Donald Pleasence as the villain.

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The Reckoning (Long novel)

The Reckoning is a 2004 thriller/suspense/horror novel by Jeff Long.

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The Restoration Man

The Restoration Man is a British home improvement television series presented by George Clarke.

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The Road to Samarcand

The Road to Samarcand is a novel by English author Patrick O'Brian, published in 1954 and set in Asia during the 1930s.

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The Role of Culture in Early Expansions of Humans

The Role of Culture in Early Expansions of Humans (ROCEEH) is an interdisciplinary project of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities.

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The Rough and the Smooth

The Rough and the Smooth (alternative title: Portrait of a Sinner) is a 1959 British drama film directed by Robert Siodmak and starring Nadja Tiller, Tony Britton, William Bendix and Edward Chapman.

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The Salisbury Museum

The Salisbury Museum (previously The Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum) is a museum in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.

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The San Diego Ghost Hunters

The San Diego Ghost Hunters is an intimate team of paranormal investigators based in San Diego, California, USA, that specializes in assisting historical landmark owners discover or confirm occupants and events that have passed from our mortal plane but still exist in spirit form.

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The Second Voyage of the Mimi

The Second Voyage of the Mimi is a twelve-episode American educational television program depicting a fictional crew of a sailboat named the Mimi exploring Mayan ruins in Southern Mexico.

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The Significance of Monuments

The Significance of Monuments: On the Shaping of Human Experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe is an archaeological book authored by the English academic Richard Bradley of the University of Reading.

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The Silver Chalice

The Silver Chalice is a 1952 English language historical novel by Thomas B. Costain.

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The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History

The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History is a 2014 non-fiction book written by Elizabeth Kolbert and published by Henry Holt & Company.

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The Source (novel)

The Source is a historical novel by James A. Michener, first published in 1965.

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The Temple Institute

The Temple Institute, known in Hebrew as Machon HaMikdash (מכון המקדש), is an organization in Israel focusing on the endeavor of establishing the Third Temple.

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The Terrible Thunderlizards

The Terrible Thunderlizards is a segment that aired in Canada on YTV and in the United States as part of Eek! Stravaganza on the Fox Kids programming block.

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The Testimony

The Testimony is a Bible magazine published monthly by the Christadelphians (Brethren in Christ).

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The Thing That Couldn't Die

The Thing that Couldn't Die is a 1958 American black-and-white horror film from an original screenplay by David Duncan for Universal Pictures, produced and directed by Will Cowan.

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The Tomb (comics)

The Tomb is a graphic novel written by Nunzio DeFilippis and Christina Weir and illustrated by Christopher Mitten.

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The Tower of the Seven Hunchbacks (film)

The Tower of the Seven Hunchbacks (Spanish:La Torre de los Siete Jorobados) is a 1944 Spanish mystery film directed by Edgar Neville.

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The University of Utah Press

The University of Utah Press is the independent publishing branch of the University of Utah and is a division of the J. Willard Marriott Library.

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The Viking Way (book)

The Viking Way: Religion and War in Late Iron Age Scandinavia is an archaeological study of Norse paganism in Late Iron Age Scandinavia.

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The Wind in the Willows (TV series)

The Wind in the Willows is a TV series that was originally broadcast between 1984 and 1987, based on characters from Kenneth Grahame's classic story The Wind in the Willows and following the 1983 film The Wind in the Willows.

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Theatre of Kosovo

Theatre in Kosovo like the culture of Kosovo is a dual tradition.

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Thebes, Greece

Thebes (Θῆβαι, Thēbai,;. Θήβα, Thíva) is a city in Boeotia, central Greece.

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Theisbergstegen

Theisbergstegen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Theistic evolution

Theistic evolution, theistic evolutionism, evolutionary creationism or God-guided evolution are views that regard religious teachings about God as compatible with modern scientific understanding about biological evolution.

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Theobroma cacao

Theobroma cacao, also called the cacao tree and the cocoa tree, is a small (tall) evergreen tree in the family Malvaceae, native to the deep tropical regions of the Americas.

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Theodoor de Booy

Theodoor Hendrik Nikolaas de Booy (December 5, 1882 – February 18, 1919) was a Dutch-born American archaeologist.

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Theodor Mommsen

Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen (30 November 1817 – 1 November 1903) was a German classical scholar, historian, jurist, journalist, politician and archaeologist.

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Theodor Schreiber

Georg Theodor Schreiber (13 May 1848, Strehla – 13 March 1913, Leipzig) was a German archaeologist and art historian.

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Theodor Verhoeven

Theodorus Lambertus Verhoeven, SVD, (17 September 1907, Uden – 1990) was a Dutch archaeologist and missionary who made the significant paleontological discovery in Indonesia of archaic stone tools in association with the c. 800,000-year-old fossils of stegodontids, or dwarf elephants, from which he concluded that islands in Wallacea had been reached by Homo erectus before modern humans appeared there.

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Theodor Wiegand

Theodor Wiegand (October 30, 1864 – December 19, 1936) was one of the more famous German archaeologists.

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Theodore Morde

Theodore A. "Ted" Morde (May 18, 1911 – June 26, 1954), an adventurer, explorer, diplomat, spy, journalist, and television news producer best known for his fabricated claim of discovering the "Lost City of the Monkey God".

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Theodore Spyropoulos

Theodore Spyropoulos (Θεόδωρος Σπυρόπουλος) is a Greek archeologist who is also a regional official of Greece's Central Archaeological Council.

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Theology of Pope Pius XII

The theology of Pope Pius XII comprised forty-one encyclicals, and almost 1000 messages, and speeches during his long pontificate.

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Theophile Meek

A scholar at the University of Toronto, Theophile James Meek (1881–1966) published widely on archaeology, corresponded with Wm. F. Albright, and was a frequent contributor to the Encyclopædia Britannica on subjects related to the archaeology of both Palestine and Egypt.

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Theophilos Kairis

Theophilos Kairis (Greek: Θεόφιλος Καΐρης; baptismal name Θωμᾶς Thomas; 19 October 1784 – 13 January 1853) was a Greek priest, philosopher and revolutionary.

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Theories about Stonehenge

Stonehenge has been the subject of many theories about its origin, ranging from the academic worlds of archaeology to explanations from mythology and the paranormal.

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Theory of mediation

The theory of mediation, which is the principal referent of the research group of the (L.I.R.L.), is a theoretic model developed at Rennes (France) since the 1960' by Professor Jean Gagnepain, linguist and epistemologist.

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Theresa A. Singleton

Theresa A. Singleton is an archaeologist and writer who focuses on the archaeology of African Americans and slavery in the United States.

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Theresa Goell

Theresa Goell (July 17, 1901 – December 18, 1985) was an American archaeologist, best known for directing excavations at Nemrud Dagh in south-eastern Turkey.

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Therkel Mathiassen

Therkel Mathiassen (5 September 1892 in Favrbo, Denmark— 14 March 1967) was an archaeologist, anthropologist, cartographer, and ethnographer notable for his scientific study of the Arctic.

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They Came to Baghdad

They Came to Baghdad is an adventure novel by Agatha Christie, first published in the United Kingdom by the Collins Crime Club on 5 March 1951The Observer, 4 March 1951 (p. 7) and in the United States by Dodd, Mead and Company later in the same year.

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Thierry Jamin

Thierry Jamin (French): - born 19 December 1967 - is a French explorer and historian known for his research about Paititi and the presence of the Incas and pre-Inca civilization in the Amazonian rainforest.

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Thomas Abel Brimage Spratt

Thomas Abel Brimage Spratt (11 May 1811 – 12 March 1888) was an English vice-admiral, hydrographer, and geologist.

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Thomas Ashby

Thomas Ashby FBA FSA (14 October 1874 in Ashford Road, Staines, Middlesex – 15 May 1931 in London) was a British archaeologist.

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Thomas Bateman

Thomas Bateman (8 November 1821 (baptised) – 28 August 1861) was an English antiquary and barrow-digger.

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Thomas Bridges (Anglican missionary)

Thomas Bridges (– 1898) was an Anglican missionary and linguist, the first to set up a successful mission to the indigenous peoples in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina.

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Thomas Chapman, 7th Baronet

Sir Thomas Robert Tighe Chapman, 7th Baronet (6 November 1846 – 8 April 1919) was an Anglo-Irish landowner, the last of the Chapman baronets of Killua Castle in Ireland.

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Thomas E. Lee

Thomas Edward Lee (1914–1982) was an archaeologist for the National Museum of Canada in the 1950s and discovered Sheguiandah on Manitoulin Island.

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Thomas Gann

Thomas William Francis Gann (13 May 1867 – 24 February 1938) was a medical doctor by profession, but is best remembered for his work as an amateur archaeologist exploring ruins of the Maya civilization.

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Thomas Grassmann

Rev.

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Thomas Hudson Turner

Thomas Hudson Turner (1815–1852) was an English archaeologist and architectural historian, born in London of Northumbrian extraction.

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Thomas Huffman

Thomas N. Huffman (born 17 July 1944) is Professor Emeritus of archaeology in association with the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.

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Thomas J. Pluckhahn

Thomas Pluckhahn is an assistant professor of the Department of Anthropology at the University of South Florida.

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Thomas J. Preston Jr.

Thomas Jex Preston Jr. (October 26, 1862 in Hastings on Hudson, New York – December 25, 1955 in South Orange, New Jersey) was a professor of archeology at Princeton University.

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Thomas Jefferson and slavery

Thomas Jefferson, 1791 In U.S. history, the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and slavery was a complex one in that Jefferson passionately worked to gradually end the practice of slavery while himself owning hundreds of African-American slaves throughout his adult life.

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Thomas Johnson Westropp

Thomas Johnson Westropp (16 August 18609 April 1922) was an Irish antiquarian, folklorist and archaeologist.

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Thomas Nelson Page

Thomas Nelson Page (April 23, 1853 – November 1, 1922) was a lawyer and American writer.

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Thomas Sever

Dr.

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Thornton Wilder

Thornton Niven Wilder (April 17, 1897 – December 7, 1975) was an American playwright and novelist.

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Thrace Foundation

Thrace Foundation is a non-profit organisation that supports the preservation of cultural heritage in Bulgaria and the world at large.

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Thracology

Thracology is the scientific study of Ancient Thrace and Thracian antiquities and is a regional and thematic branch of the larger disciplines of ancient history and archaeology.

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Threadfin jack

The threadfin jack or thread pompano (Carangoides otrynter) is a species of coastal marine fish in the jack family Carangidae.

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Three Kingdoms of Korea

The concept of the Three Kingdoms of Korea refers to the three kingdoms of Baekje (백제), Silla (신라) and Goguryeo (고구려).

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Three-age system

The three-age system is the categorization of history into time periods divisible by three; for example, the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age, although it also refers to other tripartite divisions of historic time periods.

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Three-year Expedition to East Greenland

The Three-year Expedition (Treårsekspeditionen) was an exploratory expedition to East Greenland that lasted from 1931 to 1934 financed by the Carlsberg Foundation and the Danish state.

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Throne Room, Knossos

The Throne Room was a chamber built for ceremonial purposes during the 15th century BC inside the palatial complex of Knossos, Crete, in Greece.

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Thule people

The Thule or proto-Inuit were the ancestors of all modern Inuit.

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Thunchath Ezhuthachan Malayalam University

Thunchath Ezhuthachan Malayalam University, also called Malayalam University, is a public university in Kerala, India.

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Tiber Valley Project

The British School at Rome’s Tiber Valley Project studies the changing landscapes of the middle Tiber Valley as the hinterland of Rome through two millennia.

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Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus

Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus (or Togidubnus, Togidumnus or similar) was a 1st-century king of the Regnenses or Regni tribe in early Roman Britain.

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Tibes Indigenous Ceremonial Center

The Tibes Indigenous Ceremonial Center (Centro Ceremonial Indígena de Tibes) in Barrio Portugués, Ponce municipality, Puerto Rico, houses one of the most important archeological discoveries made in the Antilles.

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Tibesti Mountains

The Tibesti Mountains are a mountain range in the central Sahara, primarily located in the extreme north of Chad, with a small extension into southern Libya.

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Tibor Sekelj

Tibor Sekelj (14 February 1912 – 20 September 1988), also known as Székely Tibor according to Hungarian orthography, was a Hungarian born polyglot, explorer, author, and 'citizen of the world.' In 1986 he was elected a member of the Academy of Esperanto and an honorary member of the World Esperanto Association.

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Tichborne

Tichborne is a village and civil parish east of Winchester in Hampshire, England.

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Tigernach mac Fócartai

Tigernach mac Fócartai (died 865), also called Tigernach of Lagore, was King of Lagore.

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Tikal

Tikal (Tik’al in modern Mayan orthography) is the ruin of an ancient city, which was likely to have been called Yax Mutal, found in a rainforest in Guatemala.

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Tillya Tepe

Tillya tepe, Tillia tepe or Tillā tapa (طلا تپه) or (literally "Golden Hill" or "Golden Mound") is an archaeological site in the northern Afghanistan province of Jowzjan near Sheberghan, excavated in 1978 by a Soviet-Afghan team led by the Greek-Russian archaeologist Viktor Sarianidi, a year before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

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Tim Loughton

Timothy Paul Loughton, (born 30 May 1962) is a British Conservative Party politician, and has been Member of Parliament (MP) for East Worthing and Shoreham since the 1997 general election.

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Tim Smit

Sir Timothy Bartel Smit KBE (born 25 September 1954) is a Dutch-born British businessman, famous for his work on the Lost Gardens of Heligan and the Eden Project, both in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Tim Springs Petroglyphs

Tim Springs Petroglyphs is an archaeological site near Indian Springs, Nevada, United States, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in December 1974.

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Tim Taylor (producer)

Professor Timothy 'Tim' Taylor is a British television producer best known for his work as the originator and producer of Channel 4's popular archaeology series Time Team.

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Timacum Minus

Timacum Minus (also known as) is archeological site located in Ravna, Serbia.

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Timber circle

In archaeology, timber circles are circular arrangements of wooden posts interpreted as being either complexes of freestanding totem poles or as the supports for large circular buildings.

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Timbuktu

Timbuktu, also spelt Tinbuktu, Timbuctoo and Timbuktoo (Tombouctou; Koyra Chiini: Tumbutu), is an ancient city in Mali, situated north of the Niger River.

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Time and Mind

Time and Mind is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary academic journal published by Taylor & Francis (formerly by Berg Publishers).

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Time capsule

A time capsule is a historic cache of goods or information, usually intended as a method of communication with future people and to help future archaeologists, anthropologists, or historians.

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Time Signs

Time Signs is a British television series that aired on Channel 4 in 1991.

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Time Team

Time Team was a British television series that originally aired on Channel 4 from 16 January 1994 to 7 September 2014.

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Time Team Digs

Time Team Digs is a British television series that aired on Channel 4 in 2002.

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Time Team Extra

Time Team Extra was a British television series that aired on Channel 4 in 1998.

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Time Team Live

Time Team Live is a British television series that airs on Channel 4.

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Timelapse (video game)

Timelapse is a 1996 graphic adventure game developed and published by by GTE Entertainment.

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Timeline (novel)

Timeline is a science fiction novel by American writer Michael Crichton, published in November 1999.

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Timeline of archaeology, 2000s

No description.

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Timeline of Channel 4

This is a timeline of the history of Channel 4.

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Timeline of chemical element discoveries

The discovery of the 118 chemical elements known to exist today is presented here in chronological order.

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Timeline of First Nations history

The history of First Nations is a prehistory and history of Canada's founding peoples from the earliest times to the present with a focus on First Nations.

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Timeline of food

No description.

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Timeline of historic inventions

The timeline of historic inventions is a chronological list of particularly important or significant technological inventions and the people who created the inventions.

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Timeline of ichthyosaur research

This timeline of ichthyosaur research is a chronological listing of events in the history of paleontology focused on the ichthyosaurs, a group of secondarily aquatic marine reptiles whose body plan is convergent with the body plans of dolphins, sharks, and swordfish.

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Timeline of Ontario history

Ontario came into being as a province of Canada in 1867 but historians use the term to cover its entire history.

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Timeline of prehistoric Scotland

This timeline of prehistoric Scotland is a chronologically ordered list of important archaeological sites in Scotland and of major events affecting Scotland's human inhabitants and culture during the prehistoric period.

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Timeline of religion

The timeline of religion is a chronological catalogue of important and noteworthy religious events in pre-historic and modern times.

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Timeline of Serer history

This is a timeline of the history and development of Serer religion and the Serer people of Senegal, The Gambia and Mauritania.

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Timeline of the Egyptian revolution of 2011

The following chronological summary of major events took place during the 2011 Egyptian revolution right up to Hosni Mubarak's resignation as the fourth President of Egypt on 11 February 2011.

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Timeline of United States discoveries

Timeline of United States discoveries encompasses the breakthroughs of human thought and knowledge of new scientific findings, phenomena, places, things, and what was previously unknown to exist.

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Timexpo Museum

The Timexpo Museum in Waterbury, Connecticut was dedicated to the history of Timex Group and its predecessors, featuring exhibits going back to the founding of Waterbury Clock Company in 1854.

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Timothy Insoll

Timothy Insoll (born 1967) is a British archaeologist and academic.

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Timothy Pauketat

Timothy R. Pauketat is an American archaeologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.

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Timothy Potts

Dr.

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Timothy Taylor (archaeologist)

Timothy Taylor (born 1960) is a British-based archaeologist specialising in prehistory and archaeological theory.

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Timothy W. Potter

Timothy William Potter (6 July 1944 – 11 January 2000) was a prominent archaeologist of ancient Italy, as well as of Roman Britain, best known for his focus on landscape archaeology.

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Timucua language

Timucua is a language isolate formerly spoken in northern and central Florida and southern Georgia by the Timucua people.

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Timucuan Preserve

The Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve is a U.S. National Preserve in Jacksonville, Florida.

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Tin sources and trade in ancient times

Tin is an essential metal in the creation of tin bronzes, and its acquisition was an important part of ancient cultures from the Bronze Age onward.

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Tintagel Castle

Tintagel Castle (Dintagel, meaning "fort of the constriction") is a medieval fortification located on the peninsula of Tintagel Island adjacent to the village of Tintagel, North Cornwall in the United Kingdom.

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Tiraspol

Tiraspol (Тирасполь; Тираспіль) is internationally recognised as the second largest city in Moldova, but is effectively the capital and administrative centre of the unrecognised Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic (Transnistria).

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Titchwell Marsh

Titchwell Marsh is an English nature reserve owned and managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB).

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Tivulaghju

Tivulaghju is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Tjølling

Tjølling is a former municipality in Vestfold county, Norway.

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Tlatelolco (archaeological site)

Tlatelolco is an archaeological excavation site in Mexico City, Mexico where remains of the pre-Columbian city-state of the same name have been found.

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Tlemcen National Park

The Tlemcen National Park (Arabic:الحديقة الوطنية تلمسان) is one of the more recent national parks of Algeria.

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TNTmips

TNTmips is a geospatial analysis system providing a fully featured GIS, RDBMS, and automated image processing system with CAD, TIN, surface modeling, map layout and innovative data publishing tools.

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To Yu-ho

To Yu-ho (1 July 1905 – 1982) was a North Korean archaeologist and member of the National People's Assembly of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

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Tobacco pipe

A tobacco pipe, often called simply a pipe, is a device specifically made to smoke tobacco.

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Toby Philpott

Toby Philpott is an English puppeteer best known for his work in motion picture animatronics during the 1980s in such films as The Dark Crystal and Return of the Jedi.

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Tocantins

Tocantins is one of the states of Brazil.

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Tocolsida

Tocolsida is a site in modern Morocco, with the remains of an ancient castra from the Roman Province of Mauretania Tingitana, Roman Empire.

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Todenroth

Todenroth is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Tokat Museum

Tokat Museum is a museum in Tokat, Turkey.

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Toktogul Dam

Toktogul Dam is a hydroelectric and irrigation dam on the Naryn River in the Jalal-Abad Province of Kyrgyzstan.

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Tokyo National Museum

The, or TNM, established in 1872, is the oldest Japanese national museum, the largest art museum in Japan and one of the largest art museums in the world.

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Tolay Lake

Tolay Lake is a shallow freshwater lake in southern Sonoma County, California, United States.

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Toledo Cathedral

The Primate Cathedral of Saint Mary of Toledo (Catedral Primada Santa María de Toledo) is a Roman Catholic church in Toledo, Spain.

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Tollard Royal

Tollard Royal is a village and civil parish on Cranborne Chase, Wiltshire, England.

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Tolmin Museum

The Tolmin Museum is public institution which covers the areas of archaeology, ethnology, general history and history of arts at upper Soča Valley region in Slovenia.

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Tom Brown's School Museum

Tom Brown's School Museum is a local museum in the village of Uffington (near Faringdon), Oxfordshire, England.

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Tom Harrisson

Major Tom Harnett Harrisson, DSO OBE (26 September 1911 – 16 January 1976) was a British polymath.

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Tomb of Aline

The Tomb of Aline is an ancient Egyptian grave from the time of Tiberius or Hadrian, excavated at Hawara in 1892.

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Tomb of Eve

The Tomb of Eve, also known as Eve's Grave and Eve's Tomb, is an archeological site located in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

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Tomb of Genghis Khan

The location of the tomb of Genghis Khan (died August 18th, 1227) has been the object of much speculation and research.

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Tomb of the Diver

The Tomb of the Diver is an archaeological monument, built in about 470 BC and found by the Italian archaeologist Mario Napoli on 3 June 1968 during his excavation of a small necropolis about 1.5 km south of the Greek city of Paestum in Magna Graecia, in what is now southern Italy.

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Tomb Raider (1996 video game)

Tomb Raider is an action-adventure video game developed by Core Design and published by Eidos Interactive.

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Tomb Raider III

Tomb Raider III: Adventures of Lara Croft is an action-adventure video game developed by Core Design and published by Eidos Interactive.

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Tombalbaye government

President François Tombalbaye faced a task of considerable magnitude when Chad became a sovereign state in 1960.

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Tombs & Treasure

Tombs & Treasure, known in Japan as, is an adventure game originally developed by Nihon Falcom in 1986 for the PC-8801, PC-9801, FM-7, MSX 2 and X1 Japanese computer systems.

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Tomography

Tomography is imaging by sections or sectioning, through the use of any kind of penetrating wave.

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Tomsk

Tomsk (p) is a city and the administrative center of Tomsk Oblast in Russia, located on the Tom River.

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Tonal (mythology)

Tonal (To nal) is a concept within the study of Mesoamerican religion, myth, folklore and anthropology.

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Tong Enzheng

Tong Enzheng (1935 – April 20, 1997) was a prominent Chinese archaeologist, historian, designer, and science fiction author.

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Tong village

Tong Village is a village in the City of Bradford metropolitan district, West Yorkshire, England.

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Tongva

The Tongva are Native Americans who inhabited the Los Angeles Basin and the Southern Channel Islands, an area covering approximately.

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Tony Clunn

John Anthony Spencer "Tony" Clunn MBE (10 May 1946 – 3 August 2014) was a retired major in the British Army, and an amateur archaeologist who discovered the main site of the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest at Kalkriese Hill.

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Tony Fisher (puzzle designer)

Tony Fisher is a British puzzle designer who specialises in creating custom rotational puzzles.

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Tony Pollard

Tony Pollard is an archaeologist specialising in the archaeology of conflict.

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Tony Robinson

Sir Anthony Robinson (born 15 August 1946) is an English actor, comedian, author, presenter and political activist.

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Tony Wilkinson

Tony James Wilkinson, FBA (14 August 1948 – 25 December 2014) was a British archaeologist and academic, specialising in landscape archaeology and the Ancient Near East.

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Tool stone

In archaeology, a tool stone is a type of stone that is used to manufacture stone tools, or stones used as the raw material for tools.

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Toolesboro Mound Group

The Toolesboro Mound Group, a National Historic Landmark, is a group of Havana Hopewell culture earthworks on the north bank of the Iowa River near its discharge into the Mississippi.

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Top

A spinning top is a toy designed to spin rapidly on the ground, the motion of which causes it to remain precisely balanced on its tip because of its rotational inertia.

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Topoxte

Topoxte (or Topoxté in Spanish orthography) is a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site in the Petén Basin in northern Guatemala with a long occupational history dating as far back as the Middle Preclassic.

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Topper Site

Topper is an archaeological site located along the Savannah River in Allendale County, South Carolina, United States.

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Toprakkale (castle)

Rusahinili ("city of (King) Rusa I)", modern Toprakkale, Turkey) is an ancient Urartian fortress built by Rusa I, located near the modern city of Van in eastern Turkey. The site has been excavated by archaeological teams from Germany, the United Kingdom, and other countries.

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Torii Ryūzō

Ryuzo Torii (鳥居 龍藏; May 4, 1870 – January 14, 1953) was a Japanese anthropologist, ethnologist, archaeologist and folklorist.

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Torill Thorstad Hauger

Torill Thorstad Hauger (22 November 1943 – 4 July 2014) was a Norwegian non-fiction writer and illustrator.

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Torrent (ship)

Torrent was an American three-masted wooden sail ship that shipwrecked near the coast of Alaska on 15 July 1868.

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Tortuguero

Tortuguero (or El Tortuguero; from Spanish "place of turtles") may refer to.

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Toruń

Toruń (Thorn) is a city in northern Poland, on the Vistula River.

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Totem and Taboo

Totem and Taboo: Resemblances Between the Mental Lives of Savages and Neurotics, or Totem and Taboo: Some Points of Agreement between the Mental Lives of Savages and Neurotics, (Totem und Tabu: Einige Übereinstimmungen im Seelenleben der Wilden und der Neurotiker) is a 1913 book by Sigmund Freud, in which the author applies psychoanalysis to the fields of archaeology, anthropology, and the study of religion.

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Toumba

In archaeology the term Toumba stands for mounds covering Bronze and early Iron Age settlements in Greece.

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Toumba (Thessaloniki)

Toumba is a quarter of east side Thessaloniki, Greece.

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Tourism in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Tourism in Bosnia and Herzegovina is a fast-growing sector making up an important part in the economy of the country.

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Tourism in Chennai

With its historic landmarks and buildings, long sandy beaches, cultural and art centers and parks, Chennai's tourism offers many potentially interesting locations to visitors.

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Tourism in Chile

Since the mid-1990s, tourism in Chile has become one of the main sources of income for the country, especially in its most extreme areas.

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Tourism in Iran

Tourism in Iran is diverse, providing a range of activities from hiking and skiing in the Alborz and Zagros mountains, to beach holidays by the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea, but the main reason that tourist visit Iran is because of Iran Cultural and Iran History and places such as Persepolis, Naghsh-e Rosta, Naghshe Jahan and other places in Iran also we have near 22 World Cultural Heritage.

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Tourism in Israel

Tourism in Israel is one of Israel's major sources of income, with a record 3.6 million tourist arrivals in 2017, yielding a 25 percent growth since 2016 and contributed NIS 20 billion to the Israeli economy making it an all-time record.

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Tourism in Karnataka

Karnataka, the eighth largest state in India, has been ranked as the third most popular state in the country for tourism in 2014.

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Tourism in Lebanon

The tourism industry in Lebanon has been historically important to the local economy and remains to this day to be a major source of revenue for Lebanon.

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Tourism in Patna

Tourism in Patna is refers to tourism in capital city of Bihar state in India.

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Tourism in Saskatchewan

There are numerous heritages and cultural attractions in the province of Saskatchewan.

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Tourism in Sri Lanka

Tourism in Sri Lanka is growing rapidly.

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Tourism in the Republic of Ireland

Tourism in the Republic of Ireland is one of the biggest contributors to the Economy of the Republic of Ireland, with 8.7 million people visiting the country in 2016, about 1.8 times Ireland's population.

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Tourism in Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan is a country with potential for an expanded tourism industry.

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Toussaint-Bernard Émeric-David

Toussaint-Bernard Émeric-David (20 August 1755 – 2 April 1839) was a French archaeologist and writer on art.

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Towarzystwo Bory Dolnośląskie

Towarzystwo Bory Dolnośląskie, TBD (The Lower Silesia Deep Woods Appreciation Society), established in 2000 in Szprotawa, is the regional nature conservation and historical preservation agency, as well as a promoter of local tourism.

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Tower Hill

Tower Hill is a complex city or garden square northwest of the Tower of London, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets just outside the City of London boundary yet inside what remains of the London Wall — a large fragment of which survives toward its east.

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Town Creek Indian Mound

Town Creek Indian Mound (31 MG 2) is a prehistoric Native American archaeological site located near present-day Mount Gilead, Montgomery County, North Carolina, in the United States.

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Townsend, Tennessee

Townsend is a city in Blount County, Tennessee, in the southeastern United States.

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Tradition

A tradition is a belief or behavior passed down within a group or society with symbolic meaning or special significance with origins in the past.

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Traditional Berber religion

The traditional Berber religion is the ancient and native set of beliefs and deities adhered to by the Berber autochthones of North Africa.

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Training excavation

Training excavations are normally run by university departments or large contractors and employ professional archaeologists to teach the basics of archaeological methodology, including photography, stratigraphy, illustration and draughtsmanship as well as survey, and finds treatment.

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Tranchet flake

In archaeology, a tranchet flake is a characteristic type of flake removed by a flintknapper during lithic reduction.

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Trapping pit

Trapping pits are deep pits dug into the ground, or built from stone, in order to trap animals.

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Treasure hunting

Treasure hunting is the physical search for treasure.

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Treasure Hunting (series)

Treasure Hunting is a Manhwa series by Kang Gyung-Hyo.

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Treasure of Guarrazar

The Treasure of Guarrazar, Guadamur, Province of Toledo, Castile-La Mancha, Spain, is an archeological find composed of twenty-six votive crowns and gold crosses that had originally been offered to the Roman Catholic Church by the Kings of the Visigoths in the seventh century in Hispania, as a gesture of the orthodoxy of their faith and their submission to the ecclesiastical hierarchy.

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Treasure of the Rudras

is a Japanese role-playing game released by Square in, and the company's last developed for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System.

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Treasure trove

Treasure trove is an amount of money or coin, gold, silver, plate, or bullion found hidden underground or in places such as cellars or attics, where the treasure seems old enough for it to be presumed that the true owner is dead and the heirs undiscoverable.

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Tree of life

The tree of life is a widespread myth (mytheme) or archetype in the world's mythologies, related to the concept of sacred tree more generally,Giovino, Mariana (2007).

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Tree throw

A tree throw or tree hole is a bowl-shaped cavity or depression created in the subsoil by a tree.

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Trellech

Trellech (occasionally spelt Trelech, Treleck or Trelleck; Tryleg) is a village and parish in Monmouthshire, south-east Wales.

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Tremeca

Tremica is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Trent University

Trent University is a public liberal arts and science-oriented university located along the Otonabee River in Peterborough, Ontario, with a satellite campus in Oshawa, which serves the Regional Municipality of Durham.

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Trenton, New Jersey

Trenton is the capital city of the U.S. state of New Jersey and the county seat of Mercer County.

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Trepanning

Trepanning, also known as trepanation, trephination, trephining or making a burr hole (the verb trepan derives from Old French from Medieval Latin trepanum from Greek trypanon, literally "borer, auger") is a surgical intervention in which a hole is drilled or scraped into the human skull, exposing the dura mater to treat health problems related to intracranial diseases or release pressured blood buildup from an injury.

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Triangle and Robert

Triangle and Robert is a webcomic by Patrick Shaughnessy that ran from August 1999 to September 2007.

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Triangle Marsh

Triangle Marsh is a wetland of the San Francisco Bay, situated at the base of Ring Mountain at the north end of the Tiburon Peninsula in Marin County, California.

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Tribe

A tribe is viewed developmentally, economically and historically as a social group existing outside of or before the development of states.

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Triclinium

A triclinium (plural: triclinia) is a formal dining room in a Roman building.

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Trikkur Mahadeva Temple

Trikkur Mahadeva Temple is a rock-cut cave temple in Trikkur village in Thrissur District in Kerala believed to have been built in the 7th or 8th century.

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Trinidad Regional Virus Laboratory

The Trinidad Regional Virus Laboratory (T.R.V.L.) was established in Port of Spain, in 1953 by the Rockefeller Foundation in co-operation with the Government of Trinidad and Tobago.

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Trinity (comic book)

Trinity is an American comic book series published by DC Comics featuring the superheroes Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman.

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Trinity Neighborhood House

The Trinity Neighborhood House is a historic brick townhouse at 406 Meridian Street located in the Eagle Hill section of East Boston, Massachusetts.

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Triple Arrow Ranch

The Triple Arrow Ranch is a ranch north of Spade near Littlefield, Texas, owned by Lamb County Judge William A. Thompson, Jr.

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Tristan Cousins

Tristan Cousins (born 1 August 1982) is a British former competitive figure skater.

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Tristram Randolph Kidder

Tristram Randolph Kidder (born 1960) is an archaeologist and professor of anthropology and environmental studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

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Trojan War

In Greek mythology, the Trojan War was waged against the city of Troy by the Achaeans (Greeks) after Paris of Troy took Helen from her husband Menelaus, king of Sparta.

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Troms

Troms (italic; Tromssa) is a county in Northern Norway.

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Trowel

A trowel is a small hand tool used for digging, applying, smoothing, or moving small amounts of viscous or particulate material.

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Trowel (journal)

Trowel is an academic journal published by postgraduate students at the School of Archaeology, University College Dublin, Ireland.

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Troy Town

Many turf mazes in England were named Troy Town, Troy-town or variations on that theme (such as Troy, The City of Troy, Troy's Walls, Troy's Hoy, or The Walls of Troy) presumably because, in popular legend, the walls of the city of Troy were constructed in such a confusing and complex way that any enemy who entered them would be unable to find his way out.

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Troyville Earthworks

Troyville Earthworks (16 CT 7) is a Woodland period Native American archaeological site with components dating from 100 BCE to 700 CE during the Baytown to the Troyville-Coles Creek periods.

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Trujillo, Peru

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Truro

Truro (Truru) is a city and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Trzin

Trzin (or; TersainLeksikon občin kraljestev in dežel zastopanih v državnem zboru, vol. 6: Kranjsko. 1906. Vienna: C. Kr. Dvorna in Državna Tiskarna, p. 30.) is the only settlement in the Municipality of Trzin.

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Tse-whit-zen

Tse-whit-zen (č̕ixʷícən in the Klallam language, meaning "inner harbor") is a 1,700- to 2,700-year-old village of the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe located along the Port Angeles, Washington waterfront.

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Tsimintiri

Tsimintiri, also known as Koimitiri, is a small, uninhabited islet in the Cyclades islands of the southern Aegean.

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TU Dresden

The TU Dresden (abbreviated as TUD and often mistakenly translated from German as Dresden University of Technology) is a public research university, the largest institute of higher education in the city of Dresden, the largest university in Saxony and one of the 10 largest universities in Germany with 37,134 students.

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Tucson Garbage Project

The Tucson Garbage Project is an archaeological and sociological study instituted in 1973 by Dr.

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Tulum, Quintana Roo

Tulum (sometimes Tulum Pueblo) is the largest community in the municipality of Tulum, Quintana Roo, Mexico.

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Tumlehed rock painting

The Tumlehed rock painting is a prehistoric rock art pictograph site, located in Tumlehed on the island of Hisingen, Gothenburg Municipality.

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Tumulus

A tumulus (plural tumuli) is a mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves.

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Tunica people

The Tunica people were a group of linguistically and culturally related Native American tribes in the Mississippi River Valley, which include the Tunica (also spelled Tonica, Tonnica, and Thonnica); the Yazoo; the Koroa (Akoroa, Courouais); and possibly the Tioux.

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Tunis

Tunis (تونس) is the capital and the largest city of Tunisia.

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Tunnel of Eupalinos

The Tunnel of Eupalinos or Eupalinian aqueduct (in Greek: Efpalinion orygma - Ευπαλίνιον όρυγμα) is a tunnel of length in Samos, Greece, built in the 6th century BC to serve as an aqueduct.

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Turó de la Rovira

Turó de la Rovira is a hill overlooking Barcelona with an altitude of 262m.

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Turboletae

The Turboletae or Turboleti were an obscure pre-Roman people from ancient Spain, which lived in the northwest Teruel province since the early 3rd Century BC.

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Turf maze

Historically, a turf maze is a labyrinth made by cutting a convoluted path into a level area of short grass, turf or lawn.

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Turi King

Turi King is a Canadian-British Professor of public engagement, and Reader in Genetics and Archaeology at the University of Leicester.

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Turkey Tayac

Turkey Tayac, legally Philip Sheridan Proctor (1895–1978), was a Piscataway Indian leader and herbal doctor; he was notable in Native American activism for tribal and cultural revival in the 20th century.

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Turks and Caicos Islands

The Turks and Caicos Islands (and), or TCI for short, are a British Overseas Territory consisting of the larger Caicos Islands and smaller Turks Islands, two groups of tropical islands in the Lucayan Archipelago of the Atlantic Ocean and northern West Indies.

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Turku

Turku (Åbo) is a city on the southwest coast of Finland at the mouth of the Aura River, in the region of Southwest Finland.

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Turlough Hill Power Station

The Turlough Hill Power Station is owned and operated by the Electricity Supply Board (ESB).

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Turner River Site

The Turner River Site is an archaeological site in the Ten Thousand Islands region of Everglades National Park, in Florida.

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Turnov

Turnov (Turnau) is a town on the Jizera river in the northern Czech Republic.

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Turquoise

Turquoise is an opaque, blue-to-green mineral that is a hydrated phosphate of copper and aluminium, with the chemical formula CuAl6(PO4)4(OH)8·4H2O.

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Tursiannotko

Tursiannotko is a Late Iron Age dwelling site located in Pirkkala, Finland.

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Tutte l'opere d'architettura et prospetiva

Tutte l'opere d'architettura et prospetiva (All the Works of Architecture and Perspective) is an architectural treatise by Italian Renaissance architect Sebastiano Serlio (1475-1554).

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Twelve-angled stone

The twelve-angled stone is an archeological artefact in Cuzco, Peru.

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Two layer hypothesis

The 'Two Layer' Hypothesis, or immigration hypothesis, is an archaeological theory that suggests the human occupation of mainland Southeast Asia occurred over two distinct periods by two separate racial groups, hence the term 'layer'.

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Tyntchtykbek Tchoroev

Tyntchtykbek Kadyrmambetovich Tchoroev (Chorotegin) (in Kyrgyz - Тынчтыкбек Чороев (Чоротегин), a Kyrgyz historian, publicist and journalist. Chairman of the Board of the Muras (Heritage) Foundation under the Office of the President of the Kyrgyz Republic (since 30 August 2013), President of the Kyrgyz History Society (elected on 11 February 2012), Doctor of History (1998), Professor of the Kyrgyz State National University named after Jusup Balasagyn (2002). Dr. Tchoroev is well known as an independent history researcher, Turkologist and journalist. Until September 2011, he worked as a broadcaster at Radio Azattyk, i.e. Kyrgyz Service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (he was Director of the Kyrgyz Service between 1 January 2003 and 30 September 2010).

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Type locality (geology)

Type locality, also called type area, type site, or type section, is the locality where a particular rock type, stratigraphic unit or mineral species is first identified.

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Type site

In archaeology a type site (also known as a type-site or typesite) is a site that is considered the model of a particular archaeological culture.

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Typology (archaeology)

In archaeology a typology is the result of the classification of things according to their physical characteristics.

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Typometry (archaeology)

Typometry in archaeology is the measurement and analysis of artifacts by various methods with metric measurements including length, width, surface area, cutting planes, hafting axis and others.

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Tyrol Castle

Tyrol Castle, less commonly Tirol Castle (Castel Tirolo, Schloss Tirol) is a castle in the comune (municipality) of Tirol near Merano, in the Burggrafenamt district of South Tyrol, Italy.

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U.S. Route 66 in Arizona

U.S. Route 66 (US 66, Route 66) covered as part of a former United States Numbered Highway in the state of Arizona.

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Uaymil

Uaymil is pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site located on the Gulf Coast of northern Campeche.

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Uşak Museum of Archaeology

The Uşak Museum of Archaeology (Uşak Arkeoloji Müzesi) is an archaeological museum in Uşak in western Turkey.

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Ubaoner

Ubaoner is the name of a fictitious ancient Egyptian magician appearing in the second chapter of a story told in the legendary Westcar Papyrus. He is said to have worked wonders during the reign of king (pharaoh) Nebka (3rd dynasty).

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Ubba

Ubba was a ninth-century Viking, and one of the commanders of the Great Army that invaded Anglo-Saxon England in the 860s.

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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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Udayagiri Caves

The Udayagiri Caves are twenty rock-cut caves near Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh from the early years of the 5th century CE.

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Udmurt State University

Udmurt State University (Удмуртский государственный университет) is a public university in the city of Izhevsk, Russia.

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Udon Thani

Udon Thani (อุดรธานี) is one of the four major cities (Khorat, Ubon Ratchathani, Udon Thani, and Khon Kaen) of the Isan region, Thailand, (known as the "big four of Isan").

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Uelen

Uelen (Уэлéн; Chukchi: Увэлен; Siberian Yupik: Улыӄ, Naukan Yupik: Олыӄ; also known as Whalen in older English-language sources and Ugelen on USCGS charts) is a rural locality (a selo) in Chukotsky District, just south of the Arctic Circle in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in the Russian Far East.

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Uersfeld

Uersfeld is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ufuk Esin

Ufuk Esin (11 October 1933 – 19 January 2008) was a Turkish archaeologist known for pioneering archaeological science in Turkey and for her excavations at Aşıklı Höyük.

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Uganda Museum

The Uganda Museum is located in Kampala, Uganda.

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Ugaritic

Ugaritic is an extinct Northwest Semitic language discovered by French archaeologists in 1929.

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Uia

Uia is the name of a narrow valley and small bay on the central eastern coast of Fatu Hiva.

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Ukichiro Nakaya

was a Japanese physicist and science essayist known for his work in glaciology and low-temperature sciences.

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Ukko

Ukko, or Äijä or Äijö (Finnish: male grandparent, grandfather, old man), parallel to Uku in Estonian mythology, is the god of the sky, weather, harvest and thunder in Finnish mythology.

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Ukonkivi

Ukonkivi, (English: Ukko's rock), is located on the island of Ukonsaari in lake Inari, Finnish Lapland.

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Ulmen

Ulmen is a town in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ulmet, Germany

Ulmet is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Ulrich Köhler

Ulrich Köhler (6 November 1838 Kleinneuhausen – 21 October 1903 Berlin) was a German archaeologist.

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Ulrich Willerding

Ulrich Willerding (born 8 July 1932 in Querfurt, Germany) is a professor emeritus of botany at the Göttingen University, Germany.

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Ulster

Ulster (Ulaidh or Cúige Uladh, Ulster Scots: Ulstèr or Ulster) is a province in the north of the island of Ireland.

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Ulster Museum

The Ulster Museum, located in the Botanic Gardens in Belfast, has around 8,000 square metres of public display space, featuring material from the collections of fine art and applied art, archaeology, ethnography, treasures from the Spanish Armada, local history, numismatics, industrial archaeology, botany, zoology and geology.

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Ulvøysund

Ulvøysund is a village and an outport in the municipality of Lillesand in Aust-Agder county, Norway.

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Umbrella term

An umbrella term is a word or phrase that covers a wide range of concepts belonging to a common category.

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UMgungundlovu

uMgungundlovu was the royal capital of the Zulu king Dingane (1828–1840) and one of several military complexes (amakhanda) which he maintained.

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Undeciphered writing systems

Many undeciphered writing systems date from several thousand years BC, though some more modern examples do exist.

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Underground Chattanooga

Underground Chattanooga is a below-ground area of Chattanooga, Tennessee that resulted from citizen efforts to prevent floods in the aftermath of the flood of 1867.

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Underwater archaeology

Underwater archaeology is archaeology practiced underwater.

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Uneven and combined development

Uneven and combined development (or unequal and combined development) is a Marxist concept to describe the overall dynamics of human history.

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Unfinished Northern Pyramid of Zawyet El Aryan

The Unfinished Northern Pyramid of Zawyet El Aryan, also known as Pyramid of Baka and Pyramid of Bikheris is the term Archaeologists and Egyptologists use to describe a large shaft part of an unfinished pyramid at Zawyet El Aryan in Egypt.

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Unguentarium

An unguentarium (plural "unguentaria") is a small ceramic or glass bottle found frequently by archaeologists at Hellenistic and Roman sites, especially in cemeteries.

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Uniface

In archeology, a uniface is a specific type of stone tool that has been flaked on one surface only.

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Union Académique Internationale

The Union Académique Internationale (UAI)—in English, International Union of Academies—is a federation of many national academies and international academies from more than 60 countries all over the world which works in the field of Humanities and Social Sciences.

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Unisinos

Unisinos is a Brazilian private Jesuit university founded in 1969.

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United States

The United States of America (USA), commonly known as the United States (U.S.) or America, is a federal republic composed of 50 states, a federal district, five major self-governing territories, and various possessions.

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United States National Marine Sanctuary

A U.S. National Marine Sanctuary is a federally designated area within United States waters that protects areas of the marine environment with special conservation, recreational, ecological, historical, cultural, archeological, scientific, educational, or aesthetic qualities.

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United States Penitentiary, Lee

The United States Penitentiary, Lee (USP Lee) is a high-security United States federal prison for male inmates in Virginia.

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Universalmuseum Joanneum

The Universalmuseum Joanneum is a multidisciplinary museum with buildings in several locations in the province of Styria, Austria.

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Université catholique de Louvain

The University of Louvain (Université catholique de Louvain, UCL) is Belgium's largest French-speaking university.

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University Medal

A University Medal is one of several different types of awards, bestowed by universities upon outstanding students or members of staff.

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University of Aberdeen College of Physical Sciences

The College of Physical Sciences was one of three colleges in the University of Aberdeen.

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University of Alabama Press

The University of Alabama Press is a university press founded in 1945 and is the scholarly publishing arm of the University of Alabama.

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University of Aleppo

University of Aleppo (جامعة حلب, also called Aleppo University) is a public university located in Aleppo, Syria.

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University of Amsterdam

The University of Amsterdam (abbreviated as UvA, Universiteit van Amsterdam) is a public university located in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

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University of Arizona Press

The University of Arizona Press, a publishing house founded in 1959 as a department of the University of Arizona, is a nonprofit publisher of scholarly and regional books.

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University of Bamberg

The University of Bamberg (Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg) in Bamberg, Germany, specializes in the Humanities, Cultural Studies, Social Sciences, Economics and Applied Computer Science.

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University of Batna

The University of Batna (Université de Batna, also named Université Colonel Hadj Lakhdar, Arabic: جامعة باتنة) is a public university in the city of Batna, Algeria.

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University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy

The University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy (Филозофски факултет Универзитета у Београду), founded in the early 19th century within the Belgrade Higher School, is the oldest and most prominent institution of higher education in Serbia and among the oldest in the South-Eastern Europe.

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University of Belize

The University of Belize (UB) is an English-speaking multi-locational institute for higher education, and the national university of the Belize.

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University of Bristol Spelæological Society

The University of Bristol Spelæological Society (UBSS) was founded in 1919 by cavers in the University of Bristol.

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University of Calgary Faculty of Arts

The Faculty of Arts is the largest faculty of the University of Calgary.

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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 Chicago

The University of Chicago (UChicago, U of C, or Chicago) is a private, non-profit research university in Chicago, Illinois.

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University of Chicago Oriental Institute

The Oriental Institute (OI), established in 1919, is the University of Chicago's interdisciplinary research center for ancient Near Eastern ("Orient") studies, and archaeology museum.

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University of Coimbra

The University of Coimbra (UC; Universidade de Coimbra) is a Portuguese public university in Coimbra, Portugal.

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University of Crete

The University of Crete (UoC; Greek: Πανεπιστήμιο Κρήτης) is a multi-disciplinary, research-oriented institution in the island of Crete, Greece, located in the cities of Rethymnon (official seat) and Heraklion, and one of the country's most academically acclaimed and reputable ones.

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University of Freiburg Faculty of Theology

The Faculty of Theology is one of the constituent faculties of the University of Freiburg located in Freiburg, Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

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University of Georgia (Tbilisi)

The University of Georgia (tr) is a university founded in 2002 in Tbilisi, Georgia.

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University of Giessen

Giessen University, official name Justus Liebig University Giessen (German: Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen), is a large public research university in Giessen, Hesse, Germany.

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University of Greifswald

The University of Greifswald (Universität Greifswald) is a public research university located in Greifswald, Germany, in the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

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University of Ioannina

The University of Ioannina (UoI; Greek: Πανεπιστήμιο Ιωαννίνων, Panepistimio Ioanninon) is a university located 5 km southwest of Ioannina, Greece.

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University of Lisbon (1911–2013)

The University of Lisbon (UL) (Universidade de Lisboa,; Latin Universitas Olisiponensis) was a public university in Lisbon, Portugal.

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University of Liverpool Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology

The University of Liverpool Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology (also known as ACE) has 40 members of staff and over 150 undergraduate and postgraduate students.

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University of Miami

The University of Miami (informally referred to as UM, U of M, or The U) is a private, nonsectarian research university in Coral Gables, Florida, United States.

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University of Michigan

The University of Michigan (UM, U-M, U of M, or UMich), often simply referred to as Michigan, is a public research university in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

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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 Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology—commonly called the Penn Museum—is an archaeology and anthropology museum that is part of the University of Pennsylvania.

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University of Peradeniya

The University of Peradeniya (පේරාදෙණිය විශ්ව විද්‍යාලය, பேராதனைப் பல்கலைக்கழகம்) is a state university in Sri Lanka, funded by the University Grants Commission.

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University of Reading

The University of Reading is a public university located in Reading, Berkshire, England.

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University of Rostock

The University of Rostock (Rostock University, Universität Rostock) is a public university located in Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany.

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University of Salento

The University of Salento (Università del Salento, called until 2007 Università degli Studi di Lecce) is a university located in Lecce, Italy.

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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 Tarapacá

University of Tarapacá (Universidad de Tarapacá) is a university in Arica, Chile.

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University of Tirana

The University of Tirana (Universiteti i Tiranës) is a public and the largest university in Albania.

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University of Utah

The University of Utah (also referred to as the U, U of U, or Utah) is a public coeducational space-grant research university in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States.

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University of Wales, Lampeter

University of Wales, Lampeter (Prifysgol Cymru, Llanbedr Pont Steffan) was a university in Lampeter, Wales.

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University of West Florida College of Arts and Sciences

The University of West Florida College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) is the liberal arts college at the University of West Florida.

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University of Wisconsin–La Crosse

The University of Wisconsin–La Crosse (also known as UW–La Crosse, UWL, or informally UWLAX) is located in La Crosse, Wisconsin United States.

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University of Yangon

University of Yangon (also the Yangon University; ရန်ကုန် တက္ကသိုလ်,; formerly Rangoon College, Rangoon University and Rangoon Arts and Sciences University), located in Kamayut, Yangon, is the oldest university in Myanmar's modern education system and the best known university in Myanmar.

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University of York

The University of York (abbreviated as Ebor or York for post-nominals) is a collegiate plate glass research university located in the city of York, England.

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University of Zadar

The University of Zadar (Sveučilište u Zadru, Universitas Studiorum Iadertina) is a university located in Zadar, Croatia.

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Unstan ware

Unstan ware is the name used by archaeologists for a type of finely made and decorated Neolithic pottery from the 4th and 3rd millennia BC.

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Unterjeckenbach

Unterjeckenbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Unut

Unut, alt.

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Unzenberg

Unzenberg is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Upper Swabia

Upper Swabia (Oberschwaben or Schwäbisches Oberland) is a region in Germany in the federal states of Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria.

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Upplandsmuseet

Upplandsmuseet is the county museum of Uppsala County in Sweden.

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Upton Castle

Upton Castle is a 13th-century castle or fortified manor house with an associated chapel, located near Cosheston, Pembrokeshire in Wales.

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Ur

Ur (Sumerian: Urim; Sumerian Cuneiform: KI or URIM5KI; Akkadian: Uru; أور; אור) was an important Sumerian city-state in ancient Mesopotamia, located at the site of modern Tell el-Muqayyar (تل المقير) in south Iraq's Dhi Qar Governorate.

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Urarina people

The Urarina are an indigenous people of the Peruvian Amazon Basin (Loreto) who inhabit the valleys of the Chambira, Urituyacu, and Corrientes Rivers.

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Urban anthropology

Urban anthropology is a subset of anthropology concerned with issues of urbanization, poverty, urban space, social relations, and neoliberalism.

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Urban archaeology

Urban archaeology is a sub discipline of archaeology specialising in the material past of towns and cities where long-term human habitation has often left a rich record of the past.

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Urban exploration

Urban exploration (often shortened as UE, urbex and sometimes known as roof-and-tunnel hacking) is the exploration of man-made structures, usually abandoned ruins or not usually seen components of the man-made environment.

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Urban history

Urban history is a field of history that examines the historical nature of cities and towns, and the process of urbanization.

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Urban revolution

In anthropology and archaeology, the Urban Revolution is the process by which small, kin-based, nonliterate agricultural villages were transformed into large, socially complex, urban societies.

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Urheimat

In historical linguistics, the term homeland (also Urheimat;; from a German compound of ur- "original" and Heimat "home, homeland") denotes the area of origin of the speakers of a proto-language, the (reconstructed or known) parent language of a group of languages assumed to be genetically related.

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Ursula Franklin

Ursula Martius Franklin, (16 September 1921 – 22 July 2016), was a German-Canadian metallurgist, research physicist, author, and educator who taught at the University of Toronto for more than 40 years.

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Uruz Project

The Uruz Project is a project with the goal of breeding back the extinct aurochs (Bos p. primigenius).

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Use-wear analysis

Use-wear analysis is a method in archaeology to identify the functions of artifact tools by closely examining their working surfaces and edges.

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Ushi no toki mairi

or refers to a prescribed method of laying a curse upon a target that is traditional to Japan, so-called because it is conducted during the hours of the Ox (between 1 and 3 AM).

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Usingen

Usingen is a small town in the Hochtaunuskreis in Hessen, Germany.

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USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D)

USS Enterprise - NCC-1701-D (or Enterprise-D) is a 24th-century starship in the fictional Star Trek universe and the principal setting of the Star Trek: The Next Generation television series.

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USS Onkahye (1843)

USS Onkahye was a schooner of the United States Navy.

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USS Somers (1842)

The second USS Somers was a brig in the United States Navy during the John Tyler administration which became infamous for being the only U.S. Navy ship to undergo a mutiny which led to executions.

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Ute Verstegen

Ute Verstegen (born 1970 in Stuttgart, Germany) is a German archaeologist.

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Utrera

Utrera is a municipality in south-west Spain.

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Uvdal Stave Church

Uvdal Stave Church (Uvdal stavkirke) is situated at Uvdal in the valley Numedal in Nore og Uvdal in Buskerud, Norway.

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Uvea (Wallis and Futuna)

Uvea (ʻUvea, Royaume coutumiers de Uvea) is one of the three official chiefdoms (Royaume coutumiers) of the French territory of Wallis and Futuna (the other two being Sigave and Alo) in Oceania in the South Pacific Ocean.

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Uwharrie Mountains

The Uwharrie Mountains, from the North Carolina Collection's website at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Uxmal

Uxmal (Yucatec Maya: Óoxmáal) is an ancient Maya city of the classical period in present-day Mexico.

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Uyghurlar

Uyghurlar (in English: The Uyghurs) is a book by poet Turghun Almas on the history of the "6,000 year history" of the Uyghur ethnic group of the Xinjiang region of China.

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V. A. Urechia

V.

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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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V. S. Wakankar

Vishnu Shridhar Wakankar (4 May 1919 – 3 April 1988) was an Indian archeologist.

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Vaccinium corymbosum

Vaccinium corymbosum, the northern highbush blueberry, is a North American species of blueberry which has become a food crop of significant economic importance.

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Vaikaradhoo (Haa Dhaalu Atoll)

Vaikaradhoo (Dhivehi: ވައިކަރަދޫ) is one of the inhabited islands of Haa Dhaalu Atoll administrative division of the Maldives.

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Valdivia culture

The Valdivia culture is one of the oldest settled cultures recorded in the Americas.

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Valentin Yanin

Valentin Lavrentievich Yanin (Валентин Лаврентьевич Янин; born 6 February 1929 in Vyatka) is a leading Russian historian who has authored 700 books and articles.

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Valenzano Winery

Valenzano Winery is a winery in Shamong in Burlington County, New Jersey.

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Valerie Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers

Valerie Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers (born 1939) served as Lord Lieutenant of Dorset from 2006 until 2014.

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Valerio Massimo Manfredi

Valerio Massimo Manfredi (born 8 March 1942) is an Italian historian, writer, essayist, archaeologist and journalist.

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Valerios Stais

Valerios Stais (Βαλέριος Στάης; b. Kythira 1857 – d. Athens 1923) was a Greek archaeologist.

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Vallay

Vallay (Bhàlaigh) is an uninhabited tidal island in the Scottish Outer Hebrides.

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Valletta Treaty

The Valletta Treaty (formally the European Convention on the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage (Revised), also known as the Malta Convention) is a multilateral treaty of the Council of Europe.

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Valley of the Kings

The Valley of the Kings (وادي الملوك), also known as the Valley of the Gates of the Kings (وادي ابواب الملوك), is a valley in Egypt where, for a period of nearly 500 years from the 16th to 11th century BC, rock cut tombs were excavated for the Pharaohs and powerful nobles of the New Kingdom (the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Dynasties of Ancient Egypt).

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Vance Haynes

Caleb Vance Haynes Jr. (born February 29, 1928), known as Vance Haynes or C. Vance Haynes Jr., is an archaeologist, geologist and author who specializes in the archaeology of the American Southwest.

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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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Vandalism

Vandalism is an "action involving deliberate destruction of or damage to public or private property".

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Vanessa Angel

Vanessa Madeline Angel (born 10 November 1966) is an English-American actress and former model.

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Vanguard Cave

Vanguard Cave is a natural sea cave in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar which is part of the Gorham's Cave complex.

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Vani

Vani (ვანი) is a town in Imereti region of western Georgia, at the Sulori river (a tributary of the Rioni river), 41 km southwest from the regional capital Kutaisi.

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Vanuatu

Vanuatu (or; Bislama, French), officially the Republic of Vanuatu (République de Vanuatu, Bislama: Ripablik blong Vanuatu), is a Pacific island nation located in the South Pacific Ocean.

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Varendra Research Society

Varendra Research Society (1910–1963) was established in Rajshahi in 1910 for the promotion of studies and research into the History of Bengal in general, and in particular of the Varendra area.

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Varna Archaeological Museum

The Varna Archaeological Museum (Варненски археологически музей, Varnenski arheologicheski muzey) is an archaeological museum in the city of Varna on the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria.

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Vasa (ship)

Vasa (or Wasa) is a retired Swedish warship built between 1626 and 1628.

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Vasco-Cantabria

Vasco-Cantabria is a term, mainly used in archaeology and the environmental sciences, for an area on the northern coast of Spain.

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Vasculaghju

Vasculaghju is an archaeological site in Corsica.

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Vasil Zlatarski

Vasil Nikolov Zlatarski (Васил Николов Златарски; 14 November 1866 – 15 December 1935) was a Bulgarian historian-medievalist, archaeologist, and epigraphist.

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Vasile Pârvan

Vasile Pârvan (28 September 1882, Perchiu, Huruiești, Bacău – 26 June 1927, Bucharest) was a Romanian historian and archaeologist.

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Vasiliki, Lasithi

Vasiliki is the name of a village in the municipality of Ierapetra, in the prefecture of Lasithi, on Crete, and the name of the nearby Minoan archeological site.

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Vasily Gorodtsov

Vasily Alekseyevich Gorodtsov (Василий Алексеевич Городцов) (23 March (O.S. 11 March), 1860, village of Dubrovichi, Ryazan Oblast - 3 February 1945, Moscow) was a Russian archaeologist.

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Vayeira

Vayeira, Vayera, or (— Hebrew for "and He appeared," the first word in the parashah) is the fourth weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.

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Vayetze

Vayetze, Vayeitzei, or Vayetzei (— Hebrew for "and he left," the first word in the parashah) is the seventh weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.

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Václav Dobruský

Václav Dobruský (Вацлав Добруски, Vatslav Dobruski; 11 August 1858 – 24 December 1916) was a Czech archaeologist, epigrapher and numismatist who was mostly active in Bulgaria.

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Västerbottens Museum

Västerbottens museum in the Gammlia area of Umeå, Sweden is a county museum with responsibility for the cultural history of Västerbotten County.

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Vöhl

Vöhl is a community in Waldeck-Frankenberg in Hesse, Germany not far southwest of Kassel.

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Vela Luka

Vela Luka (Italian: Vallegrande) is a small town and a municipality in Dubrovnik-Neretva County in southern Dalmatia, Croatia.

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Vela Spila

The Vela Spila cave (italic, "Big Cave") is situated above the town of Vela Luka on the island of Korčula, in Croatia on Pinski Rat hill at an elevation of approximately.

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Veldwezelt-Hezerwater

Veldwezelt-Hezerwater is a Palaeolithic archaeological site in the municipality of Lanaken in the province of Limburg, Belgium.

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Veliki Tabor Castle

Veliki Tabor is a castle and museum in northwest Croatia, dating from the middle of 15th century.

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Velká Dobrá

Velká Dobrá is a village in the Central Bohemian Region (Středočeský kraj) of the Czech Republic.

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Velletri

Velletri (Velitrae, Velester) is an Italian comune in the Metropolitan City of Rome, on the Alban Hills, in Lazio, central Italy.

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Velma Dinkley

Velma Dinkley is a fictional character in the Scooby-Doo franchise.

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Venafro

Venafro (Latin: Venafrum; Greek: Οὐέναφρον) is a comune in the province of Isernia, region of Molise, Italy.

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Vendyl Jones

Vendyl Miller Jones (May 29, 1930 – December 27, 2010) was an American Noahide scholar who directed archaeological searches for biblical artifacts such as the Ark of the Covenant.

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Venice National Archaeological Museum

The National Archaeological Museum (Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Venezia) is a museum located right on Piazza San Marco in Venice.

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Venta Silurum

Venta Silurum was a town in the Roman province of Britannia or Britain.

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Venus of Savignano

The Venus of Savignano is a Venus figurine made from soft greenstone (serpentine) dating back to the Upper Paleolithic, which was discovered in 1925 near Savignano sul Panaro in the Province of Modena, Italy.

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Venus of Tan-Tan

The Venus of Tan-Tan is an alleged artifact found in Morocco.

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Venus of Willendorf

The Venus of Willendorf is an Venus figurine estimated to have been made 30,000 BCE.

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Vernacular architecture in Norway

Vernacular architecture in Norway covers about 4,000 years of archeological, literary, and preserved structures.

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Vernon L. Scarborough

Vernon Lee Scarborough (born 1950) is an American academic anthropologist and archaeologist, known for his research and publications on settlement, land use and water management practices of archaic and Pre-industrial society.

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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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Very Short Introductions

Very Short Introductions (VSI) are a book series published by the Oxford University Press (OUP).

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Veryan

Veryan (Cornish: Elerghi) is a coastal civil parish and village on the Roseland Peninsula in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Vesly, Manche

Vesly is a commune in the Manche department in Normandy in north-western France.

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Vesna Girardi-Jurkić

Vesna Girardi-Jurkić (15 January 1944 – 25 August 2012) was a Croatian archeologist and museologist.

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Vesper Holly

Vesper Holly is the protagonist in a series of novels by Lloyd Alexander.

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Vestby

Vestby is a municipality in Akershus county, Norway.

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Vettones

The Vettones (Greek: Ouettones) were a pre-Roman people of the Iberian Peninsula of possibly Celtic ethnicity.

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Via Dolorosa

The Via Dolorosa (Latin for "Way of Grief," "Way of Sorrow," "Way of Suffering" or simply "Painful Way"; Hebrew: ויה דולורוזה; طريق الآلام) is a street within the Old City of Jerusalem, believed to be the path that Jesus walked on the way to his crucifixion.

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Vicenç Ros Municipal Museum

The Vicenç Ros Municipal Museum, in Martorell (Baix Llobregat), occupies one of the sections of an old Capuchin convent dating back to the 17th century and is part of Barcelona Provincial Council Local Museum Network.

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Victor Ambrus

Victor Ambrus (born László Győző Ambrus, 19 August 1935) is a British illustrator of history, folk tale, and animal story books.

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Victor Erle Nash-Williams

Victor Erle Nash-Williams (21 August 1897 – 15 December 1955) was a noted Welsh archaeologist.

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Victor Guérin

Victor Guérin (15 September 1821 – 21 September 1891) was a French intellectual, explorer and amateur archaeologist.

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Victor H. Mair

Victor Henry Mair (born March 25, 1943) is an American Sinologist and professor of Chinese at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Victor Loret

Victor Clement Georges Philippe Loret (1 September 1859 – 3 February 1946) was a French Egyptologist.

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Victor Schnirelmann

Victor Alexandrovich Schnirelmann (Виктор Александрович Шнирельман, b. 18 May 1949, Moscow; frequently spelled Shnirelman in his English-language publications) is a Russian historian, ethnologist and a member of Academia Europaea (since 1998).

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Victor Schultze

Victor Schultze (13 December 1851, in Fürstenberg – 6 January 1937, in Greifswald) was a German church historian and archaeologist.

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Victor Segalen

Victor Segalen (14 January 1878 – 21 May 1919) was a French naval doctor, ethnographer, archeologist, writer, poet, explorer, art-theorist, linguist and literary critic.

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Victor Spinei

Victor Spinei (26 October 1943, Lozova, Lăpușna County, Romania) is Emeritus Professor of history and archaeology at the Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, member and Vicepresident of the Romanian Academy.

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Victoria Building, University of Liverpool

The Victoria Building of the University of Liverpool, is on the corner of Brownlow Hill and Ashton Street, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.

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Victoria Gallery & Museum

The Victoria Gallery & Museum (VG&M) is an art gallery and museum run by the University of Liverpool in Liverpool, Merseyside, England.

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Victoria Herridge

Victoria Louise "Tori" Herridge, born 1980, is a palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in London and one of the founders of Trowelblazers, which celebrates women archaeologists, palaeontologists and geologists.

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Victoria Whitworth

Victoria (V.M.) Whitworth (née Thompson in London 1966) is an Anglo-Scots writer, archaeologist and art historian.

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Viewshed

A viewshed is the geographical area that is visible from a location.

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Vigiliae Christianae (journal)

Vigiliae Christianae: A Review of Early Christian Life and Languages is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Brill Publishers in the field of early Christian studies.

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Vikentiy Khvoyka

Vikentiy Viacheslavovych Khvoyka (Вікентій В'ячеславович Хвойка; Викентий Вячеславович Хвойка; Vincenc Častoslav Chvojka; born Čeněk Chvojka; 1850–1914) was a Czech-born Russian (Ukrainian) archaeologist, who discovered the Neolithic Trypillia culture in Ukraine.

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Viking Apocalypse

Viking Apocalypse is a TV program on the National Geographic Channel.

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Viking art

Viking art, also known commonly as Norse art, is a term widely accepted for the art of Scandinavia and Viking settlements further afield—particularly in the British Isles and Iceland—during the Viking Age of the 8th-11th centuries CE.

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Viking Museum (Aarhus)

The Viking Museum (Vikingemuseet) is a small underground museum in central Aarhus, Denmark.

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Viking Ship Museum (Oslo)

The Viking Ship Museum (Norwegian: Vikingskipshuset på Bygdøy) is located at Bygdøy in Oslo, Norway.

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Vikings

Vikings (Old English: wicing—"pirate", Danish and vikinger; Swedish and vikingar; víkingar, from Old Norse) were Norse seafarers, mainly speaking the Old Norse language, who raided and traded from their Northern European homelands across wide areas of northern, central, eastern and western Europe, during the late 8th to late 11th centuries.

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Viktor Petrov

Viktor Petrov (Віктор Петров 1894 – 1969) was a prominent Soviet Ukrainian existentialist writer.

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Viktor Sarianidi

Viktor Ivanovich Sarianidi or Victor Sarigiannides (Ви́ктор Ива́нович Сариани́ди; Βίκτωρ Σαρηγιαννίδης; September 23, 1929 – December 22, 2013) was a Soviet archaeologist.

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Viktor Yushchenko

Viktor Andriyovych Yushchenko (Віктор Андрійович Ющенко,; born February 23, 1954) is a Ukrainian politician who was the third President of Ukraine from January 23, 2005 to February 25, 2010.

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Vilafranca del Penedès

Vilafranca del Penedès, or simply Vilafranca, is the capital of the ''comarca'' of the Alt Penedès in Catalonia, Spain.

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Vilassar de Dalt Archive-Museum

The purpose of the Vilassar de Dalt Archive-Museum (Museu-Arxiu de Vilassar de Dalt) is the conservation and dissemination of the archaeological, architectural, historical, natural and cultural heritage of Vilassar de Dalt and its environment.

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Villa Romana del Casale

The Villa Romana del Casale (Sicilian: Villa Rumana dû Casali) is a large and elaborate Roman villa or palace located about 3 km from the town of Piazza Armerina, Sicily.

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Villa rustica

Villa rustica (countryside villa) was the term used by the ancient Romans to denote a villa set in the open countryside, often as the hub of a large agricultural estate (latifundium).

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Villars Cave

The Villars Cave, in French Grotte de Villars or Grotte du Cluzeau, was occupied during the Lower Magdalenian by Cro-Magnon hunter-gatherers.

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Villena

Villena is a city in Spain, in the Valencian Community.

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Vilnius Castle Complex

The Vilnius Castle Complex (Vilniaus pilių kompleksas or Vilniaus pilys) is a group of cultural, and historic structures on the left bank of the Neris River, near its confluence with the Vilnia River, in Vilnius, Lithuania.

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Vinalhaven, Maine

Vinalhaven is a town located on the larger of the two Fox Islands in Knox County, Maine, United States.

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Vinča symbols

The Vinča symbols, sometimes called the Danube script, Vinča signs, Vinča script, Vinča–Turdaș script, Old European script, etc., are a set of symbols found on Neolithic era (6th to 5th millennia BC) artifacts from the Vinča culture of Central Europe and Southeastern Europe.

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Vincennes Trace

The Vincennes Trace was a major trackway running through what are now the American states of Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois.

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Vincent Price

Vincent Leonard Price Jr. (May 27, 1911 – October 25, 1993) was an American actor, well known for his distinctive voice and performances in horror films.

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Vine Deloria Jr.

Vine Victor Deloria Jr. (March 26, 1933 – November 13, 2005) was a Native American author, theologian, historian, and activist.

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Violence

Violence is defined by the World Health Organization as "the intentional use of physical force or power, threatened or actual, against oneself, another person, or against a group or community, which either results in or has a high likelihood of resulting in injury, death, psychological harm, maldevelopment, or deprivation," although the group acknowledges that the inclusion of "the use of power" in its definition expands on the conventional understanding of the word.

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Virginia Grace

Virginia Grace (1901–1994) was an American archaeologist, known for her lifelong work into amphoras and their stamped handles.

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Virginia Museum of Natural History

The Virginia Museum of Natural History is the state's natural history museum located in Martinsville, Virginia founded in 1984.

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Virgohamna

Virgohamna (English: Virgo Bay) is a small bay on the northern coast of Danes Island, an island off the northwestern coast of Spitsbergen.

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Virtual archaeology

Virtual archaeology is a term introduced in 1990 by archaeologist and computer scientist Paul Reilly to describe the use of computer based simulations of archaeological excavations.

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Virtual artifact

A virtual artifact (VA) is an immaterial object that exists in the human mind or in a digital environment, for example the Internet, intranet, virtual reality, cyberspace, etc.

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Virtual heritage

Virtual heritage or cultural heritage and technology is the body of works dealing with information and communication technologies (ICT) and their application to cultural heritage, such as virtual archaeology.

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Virtual Teaching Collection

The Virtual Teaching Collection (VTC) project at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology within the University of Cambridge, led by Dr Robin Boast, ran from 1994 to 1997 and was part of the Teaching and Learning Technology Project funded by the Higher Education Funding Council for England.

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Vishnu

Vishnu (Sanskrit: विष्णु, IAST) is one of the principal deities of Hinduism, and the Supreme Being in its Vaishnavism tradition.

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Visoko during the Middle Ages

Archaeological excavations proved that the Visoko Valley was the center of a medieval Bosnian state and later kingdom.

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Vivant Denon

Dominique Vivant, Baron Denon (4 January 174727 April 1825) was a French artist, writer, diplomat, author, and archaeologist.

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Vladas Žulkus

Vladas Žulkus (born April 16, 1945 in Telšiai) is a Lithuanian archaeologist.

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Vladimír Špidla

Vladimír Špidla (born 22 April 1951) is a Czech politician who served as Prime Minister of the Czech Republic from July 2002 to June 2004 and as European Commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities from November 2004 to February 2010.

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Vladimir Ćorović

Vladimir Ćorović (Владимир Ћоровић; October 27, 1885 – April 12, 1941) was a leading 20th-century Serbian historian and a member of the Serbian Royal Academy, which later became the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (SANU).

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Vladimir Biryukov

Vladimir Pavlovich Biryukov (Владимир Павлович Бирюков; 10 O.S./22 July 1888–18 June 1971) was a Soviet ethnographer, lexicographer, museum worker, archaeologist, historian, folklorist, and the author of over 30 books.

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Vladimir Pecikoza

Vladimir Pecikoza (Valjevo, August 1, 1977) is a Serbian archaeologist and Head of the Archaeology Department at the Petnica Science Center.

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Vladimir Petrukhin

Vladimir Petrukhin (full name: Vladimir Yakovlevich Petrukhin, Влади́мир Я́ковлевич Петру́хин; born on July 25, 1950 in Pushkino, Moscow Oblast, Soviet Union) is a Russian historian, archaeologist and ethnographer, Doctor of Historical Sciences (since 1994), professor of History and Archives Institute of the Russian State University for the Humanities, chief research fellow of the Medieval Section of the Institute of Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

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Volcano Park, Mayen-Koblenz

The Volcano Park in Mayen-Koblenz (Vulkanpark) is a geopark in the rural district of Mayen-Koblenz in the eastern Vulkan Eifel, Germany.

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Volodymyr Antonovych

Volodymyr Antonovych (Володи́мир Боніфа́тійович Антоно́вич; Włodzimierz Antonowicz; Влади́мир Бонифа́тьевич Антоно́вич; January 30, 1834, – March 21, 1908, Kiev) was a prominent Ukrainian historian and one of the leaders of the Ukrainian independence awakening in the Russian Empire.

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Vorarlberg museum

The vorarlberg museum (former name Vorarlberger Landesmuseum) in Bregenz is the state art and cultural museum of the Austrian federal state of Vorarlberg.

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Vosges

The Vosges (or; Vogesen), also called the Vosges Mountains, are a range of low mountains in eastern France, near its border with Germany.

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Votive offering

A votive deposit or votive offering is one or more objects displayed or deposited, without the intention of recovery or use, in a sacred place for broadly religious purposes.

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Vranjic

Vranjic (Vragnizza) is a town north of Split, near the mouth of Jadro River, part of the municipality of Solin.

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Vronwy Hankey

Vronwy Hankey (b. Vronwy Mary Fisher) (15 September 1916 – 11 May 1998) was an archaeologist, a specialist in Near Eastern, Minoan, and Mycenaean archaeology.

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Vselyub

Vselyub (Уселюб, Wsielub) is an agrotown in Navahrudak District, Grodno Region, Belarus.

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Vsevolod Miller

Vsevolod Fyodorovich Miller (Все́волод Фёдорович Ми́ллер) (April 7 (N.S. April 19), 1848, Moscow – November 5 (N.S. November 18), 1913, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian philologist, folklorist, linguist, anthropologist, archaeologist, and academician of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1911).

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Vshchizh

Vshchizh (Вщиж) is a village (former city) in the Zhukovka rayon of the Bryansk Oblast of Russia.

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Vykintas Vaitkevičius

Vykintas Vaitkevičius is a Lithuanian archaeologist.

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W. Douglas Simpson

William Douglas Simpson CBE (2 August 1896 – 9 October 1968) was a Scottish academic and writer who focused on the study of medieval architecture and archaeology.

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W. E. S. Turner

William Ernest Stephen Turner (22 September 1881 – 27 October 1963) was a British chemist and pioneer of scientific glass technology.

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W. F. Grimes

William Francis Grimes (known as Peter; 31 October 1905 – 25 December 1988) was a Welsh archaeologist.

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W. H. Wills

W.

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W. Michael Gear

W.

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Wachenheim, Alzey-Worms

Wachenheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wadi Jilat

Wadi Jilat is a seasonal stream (wadi) in the Badia of eastern Jordan.

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Wadi Numeira

Wadi Numeira is a Wadi in Jordan that is known for its deep gorge cut through the sandstone.

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Wadi Sallah

Wadi Sallah is a branch of the Wadi Fa'rah where a small cave is located in the Palestinian Tubas Governorate in the northeastern West Bank, located five kilometers southwest of Tubas.

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Wadi Tahuna

Wadi Tahuna is an archaeological site of the Tahunian culture that was excavated in 1928 by Denis Buzy near Bethlehem in Palestine.

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Wahbi al-Hariri

Wahbi al-Hariri-Rifai وهبي الحريري آلرفاعي (1914-16 August 1994) was a Syrian American artist who has often been called "the last of the classicists".

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Wahlbach, Rhineland-Palatinate

Wahlbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wahlenau

Wahlenau is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wahnwegen

Wahnwegen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wairau Bar

The Wairau Bar, or Te Pokohiwi, is a gravel bar formed where the Wairau River meets the sea in Cloudy Bay, Marlborough, north-eastern South Island, New Zealand.

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Wairau River

The Wairau River is one of the longest rivers in New Zealand's South Island.

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Wake Island

Wake Island (also known as Wake Atoll) is a coral atoll in the western Pacific Ocean in the northeastern area of the Micronesia subregion, east of Guam, west of Honolulu and southeast of Tokyo.

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Walam Olum

The Walam Olum or Walum Olum, usually translated as "Red Record" or "Red Score," is purportedly a historical narrative of the Lenape (Delaware) Native American tribe.

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Waldemar Belck

Waldemar Belck (25 February 1862, in Danzig – 6 September 1932, in Frankfurt am Main) was a German chemist and amateur archaeologist.

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Waldgirmes Forum

The Roman Forum of Lahnau-Waldgirmes (Römisches Forum Lahnau-Waldgirmes) is a fortified Roman trading place, located at the edge of the modern village Waldgirmes, part of Lahnau on the Lahn, Hesse, Germany.

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Waldmohr

Waldmohr is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Waldo Rudolph Wedel

Waldo Rudolph Wedel (September 10, 1908 – August 27, 1996) was an American archaeologist and a central figure in the study of the prehistory of the Great Plains.

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Waldshut-Tiengen

Waldshut-Tiengen is a city in southwestern Baden-Württemberg right at the Swiss border.

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Walkington Wold burials

The Walkington Wold burials in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, comprise the skeletal remains of 13 individuals from the Anglo-Saxon period which were discovered in the late 1960s, during the excavation of a Bronze Age barrow.

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Walkwalkwalk

Walkwalkwalk (2005-2010) is a British artist collective consisting of Gail Burton, Serena Korda and Clare Qualmann.

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Wallblake House

Wallblake House is a heritage plantation house and museum annex in The Valley, Anguilla in the northeastern Caribbean.

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Wallertheim

Wallertheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Alzey-Worms district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wallkill River

The Wallkill River, a tributary of the Hudson, drains Lake Mohawk in Sparta, New Jersey, flowing from there generally northeasterly U.S. Geological Survey.

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Walmley

Walmley is an area of Sutton Coldfield, England.

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Walter Alva

Walter Alva (born 28 June 1951), full name is Walter Alva Alva, is a Peruvian archaeologist, specializing in the study and excavation of the prehistoric Moche culture.

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Walter Alvarez

Walter Alvarez (born October 3, 1940) is a professor in the Earth and Planetary Science department at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Walter Andrae

Walter Andrae (February 18, 1875 – July 28, 1956) was a German archaeologist and architect born near Leipzig.

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Walter B. Jones (geologist)

Walter Bryan Jones, Ph.D. (1895–1977) was an American geologist and archaeologist.

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Walter Battiss

Walter Whall Battiss (6 January 1906 – 20 August 1982) was a South African artist, who was generally considered to be the foremost South African abstract painter and known as the creator of the quirky "Fook Island" concept.

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Walter Karig

Walter Karig (13 November 1898 - 30 September 1956) was a prolific author, who served as a US naval captain.

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Walter Kutschera

Walter Kutschera (born 1939) is an Austrian physicist.

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Walter Lehmann (ethnologist)

Walter Hartmut Traugott Erdmann Lehmann (16 September 1878 – 7 February 1939) was a German ethnologist, linguist and archeologist, known for his documentation of many indigenous cultures and languages of Central America.

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Walter Maioli

Walter Maioli (born 1950 in Milan) is an Italian researcher, paleorganologist, poly-instrumentalist and composer.

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Walter Neves

Walter Alves Neves is a Brazilian anthropologist, archaeologist and biologist from the University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil.

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Walter Taylor (archaeologist)

Walter Willard Taylor, Jr. (1913–1997) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist most famous for his work at Coahuila in Mexico and his "Conjunctive archaeology", a method of studying the past combining elements of both the traditional archaeology of the period and the allied field of anthropology.

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Walter-Herwig Schuchhardt

Walter-Herwig Schuchhardt (March 8, 1900 - January 14, 1976) was a German classical archaeologist and art historian born in Hanover.

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Walther Amelung

Walther Oskar Ernst Amelung (15 October 1865 – 12 September 1927) was a German classical archaeologist who was a native of Stettin.

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Walther Judeich

Walther Judeich (5 October 1859, Dresden – 24 February 1942, Jena) was a German ancient historian.

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Wanchese, North Carolina

Wanchese is a census-designated place (CDP) on Roanoke Island in Dare County, North Carolina, United States.

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Wandlebury Enigma

The Wandlebury Enigma refers to a number of suggested hypotheses about the purpose, function and decoration of Wandlebury Hill.

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Wang Tao (archaeologist)

Wang Tao (born 1962) is a Chinese–British archaeologist and art historian specialising in early Chinese art.

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Wang Zhongshu

Wang Zhongshu (15 October 1925 – 24 September 2015) was a Chinese archaeologist who helped to establish and develop the field of archaeology in China.

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Wang Ziyun

Wang Ziyun (王子云 March 1897 – 1990) was a Chinese oil painter, sculptor and archaeologist, born in Xuzhou, Jiangsu, China.

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Wannado City

Wannado City was an indoor role-playing amusement center at the Sawgrass Mills in Sunrise, Florida, a suburb of Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

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Wansdyke (earthwork)

Wansdyke (from Woden's Dyke) is a series of early medieval defensive linear earthworks in the West Country of England, consisting of a ditch and a running embankment from the ditch spoil, with the ditching facing north.

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Wanton–Lyman–Hazard House

The Wanton–Lyman–Hazard House is the oldest surviving house in Newport, Rhode Island, United States.

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War Before Civilization

War Before Civilization: the Myth of the Peaceful Savage (Oxford University Press, 1996) is a book by Lawrence H. Keeley, a professor of archaeology at the University of Illinois at Chicago who specializes in prehistoric Europe.

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Warburg

Warburg is a town in eastern North Rhine-Westphalia on the river Diemel near the three-state point shared by Hessen, Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia.

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Waregem

Waregem is a municipality located in the Belgian province of West Flanders.

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Wari Empire

The Wari Empire was a political formation that emerged around AD 600 in the central highlands of Peru and lasted for about 500 years, to 1100 AD.

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Warlords of Atlantis

Warlords of Atlantis is a 1978 British science fiction/fantasy film about a trip to the lost world of Atlantis.

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Warren Hill, Bournemouth

Warren Hill is the elevated part of Hengistbury Head in Dorset, England, overlooking Christchurch to the North and dominating Poole Bay to the West.

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Warren's Shaft

Warren's Shaft is an archaeological feature in Jerusalem discovered in 1867 by British engineer Sir Charles Warren (1840–1927).

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Warriparinga

Warriparinga (meaning Windy Place in the local Kaurna language) is a nature reserve comprising in the metropolitan suburb of Bedford Park, in the southern suburbs of Adelaide, South Australia.

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Wartberg culture

The Wartberg culture (Wartbergkultur), sometimes: Wartberg group (Wartberggruppe) or Collared bottle culture (Kragenflaschenkultur) is a prehistoric culture from 3,600 -2,800 BC of the later Central European Neolithic.

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Washington State Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation

The Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation (DAHP) is an independent government agency in Washington state which serves several functions, including regulatory functions.

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Watching brief

In British archaeology a Watching Brief is a method of preserving archaeological remains by record in the face of development threat.

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Waterberg Biosphere

The Waterberg (Thaba Meetse) is a mountainous massif of approximately in north Limpopo Province, South Africa.

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Waterberg District Municipality

Waterberg is one of the 5 districts of Limpopo province of South Africa.

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Waterlogging (archaeology)

In archaeology, waterlogging refers to the long-term exclusion of air by groundwater, which creates an anaerobic environment that can preserve artifacts perfectly.

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Wattle Point Wind Farm

Wattle Point Wind Farm is a wind farm near Edithburgh on the Yorke Peninsula in South Australia, which has been operating since April 2005.

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Waulpane

Wavula Pane is a cave located in Bulutota Rakwana range, northwest of Embilipitiya one of the archeological site located in Sri Lanka.

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Wayanad district

Wayanad is a district in the north-east of Kerala state, India with headquarters at the town of Kalpetta.

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Wayland's Smithy

Wayland's Smithy is a Neolithic long barrow and chamber tomb site located near the Uffington White Horse and Uffington Castle, at Ashbury in the English county of Oxfordshire.

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Wörter und Sachen

Wörter und Sachen (German for words and things) was a philological movement of the early 20th Century, based largely in Germany and Austria.

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Władysław Filipowiak

Władysław Filipowiak (29 April 1926 – 31 March 2014) was a Polish professor, writer, and archaeologist.

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Wealth

Wealth is the abundance of valuable resources or valuable material possessions.

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Weeden Island culture

The Weeden Island Cultures are a group of related archaeological cultures that existed during the Late Woodland period of the North American Southeast.

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Weedon Island Preserve

The Weedon Island Preserve is a 3,190 acre natural area situated along the western shore of Tampa Bay, and located on 1800 Weedon Drive NE.

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Weißenborn, Hesse

Weißenborn (or Weissenborn) is a community in the Werra-Meißner-Kreis in Hesse, Germany.

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Weißenfels (district)

Weißenfels was a district (Kreis) in the south of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

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Weingarten, Württemberg

(German for "wine garden") is a town with a population of 24,000 in Württemberg, in the District of Ravensburg, in the valley of the Schussen River.

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Weinheim

is a town in the north west of the state of Baden-Württemberg in Germany with 43,000 inhabitants, approximately north of Heidelberg and northeast of Mannheim.

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Weir Hill

Weir Hill Reservation (historically pronounced “wire hill”) is a public park located in the town of North Andover, Massachusetts.

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Weitersbach

Weitersbach is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Welaka, Florida

Welaka is a town situated on the St. Johns River in Putnam County, Florida, United States.

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Welchweiler

Welchweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Welsh Archaeological Trusts

The Welsh Archaeological Trusts consists of four Welsh Archaeological Trust organisations established in the mid-1970s to respond to rescue archaeology together with providing a uniform local archaeology service across Wales.

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Welsh Newton

Welsh Newton is a small village and civil parish in the county of Herefordshire, England.

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Welwyn Roman Baths

The Welwyn Roman Baths are a Roman ruin preserved under the A1(M) just north of modern-day Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, England.

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Wendake, Quebec

Wendake is the current name for an urban reserve of the Huron-Wendat Nation in the Canadian province of Quebec.

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Wendy Ashmore

Wendy Ashmore is a professor of Maya archaeology at the University of California, Riverside.

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Weneg (pharaoh)

Weneg (or Uneg), also known as Weneg-Nebty, is the throne name of an early Egyptian king, who ruled during the second dynasty.

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Wentworth Cheswell

Wentworth Cheswell (11 April 1746 – 8 March 1817) was an American assessor, auditor, Justice of the Peace, teacher and Revolutionary War veteran in Newmarket, New Hampshire.

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Wenzhou

Wenzhou (pronounced; Wenzhounese) is a prefecture-level city in southeastern Zhejiang province in the People's Republic of China.

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Wenzhou people

Wenzhou people or Wenzhounese people is a subgroup of Oujiang Wu Chinese speaking peoples, who live primarily in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province.

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Werewolf (1996 film)

Werewolf (also known as Arizona Werewolf) is a 1996 American direct-to-video horror film by Iranian-born director Tony Zarrindast.

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Werner Körte

Werner Körte (21 October 1853 – 3 December 1937) was a German surgeon born in Berlin.

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Wes Anderson

Wesley Wales Anderson (born May 1, 1969) is an American film director, film producer, screenwriter, and actor.

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Wessex Archaeology

Wessex Archaeology is a company with limited liability registered in England, No.

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West Bengal State University

West Bengal State University (WBSU) also known as Barasat University, is a public university situated in Berunanpukuria, 6 km off form Barasat city, North 24 Paraganas, near the city of Kolkata, West Bengal, India.

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West Carroll Parish, Louisiana

West Carroll Parish (Paroisse de Carroll Ouest) is a parish located in the northeastern part of the U.S. state of Louisiana.

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West Godavari district

West Godavari district or Paschima Godavari Jilla is one of the 13 districts in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

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West Heslerton

West Heslerton is a small village in North Yorkshire, England, southeast of Pickering.

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West Kennet Long Barrow

The West Kennet Long Barrow is a Neolithic tomb or barrow, situated on a prominent chalk ridge, near Silbury Hill, one-and-a-half miles south of Avebury in Wiltshire, England.

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West Stow

West Stow is a small village and civil parish in West Suffolk, England.

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Westerburg

Westerburg is a small town of roughly 6,000 inhabitants in the Westerwaldkreis in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Western Asia

Western Asia, West Asia, Southwestern Asia or Southwest Asia is the westernmost subregion of Asia.

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Western Australian Museum

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

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Western canon

The Western canon is the body of Western literature, European classical music, philosophy, and works of art that represents the high culture of Europe and North America: "a certain Western intellectual tradition that goes from, say, Socrates to Wittgenstein in philosophy, and from Homer to James Joyce in literature".

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Western Science Center

The Western Science Center (WSC), formerly the Western Center for Archaeology & Paleontology, is a museum located near Diamond Valley Lake in Hemet, California.

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Westhay Moor

Westhay Moor (sometimes, historically, referred to as West Hay Moor) is a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest north-east of Westhay village and from Wedmore in Somerset, England, notified in 1971.

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Westinghouse Time Capsules

The Westinghouse Time Capsules are two time capsules prepared by the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company: "Time Capsule I" was created for the 1939 New York World's Fair and "Time Capsule II" was created for the 1964 New York World's Fair.

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Weston Bay

Weston Bay is an inlet of the Bristol Channel in North Somerset, England.

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Weston Canyon Rock Shelter

The Weston Canyon Rock Shelter, located in Franklin County, Idaho in the vicinity of Weston, Idaho is a historic site listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

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Wheaton Warrenville South High School

Wheaton Warrenville South High School (WWSHS), locally referred to as "South", is a public four-year high school in Wheaton, Illinois.

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Wheeler-Kenyon method

The Wheeler -Kenyon method is a method of archaeological excavation.

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Wheelers (novel)

Wheelers is a science fiction novel written by English mathematician Ian Stewart and reproductive biologist Jack Cohen, figures notable for both their personal scholarly work and numerous individual and collaborative contributions to the world of science fiction.

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Wheelhouse (archaeology)

In archaeology, a wheelhouse is a prehistoric structure from the Iron Age found in Scotland.

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Where Troy Once Stood

Where Troy Once Stood is a 1990 book by Iman Wilkens that argues that the city of Troy was located in England and that the Trojan War was fought between groups of Celts.

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White Clay Creek Preserve

White Clay Creek Preserve is a Pennsylvania state park along the valley of White Clay Creek in London Britain Township in Chester County, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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White gods

White gods is the belief that ancient cultures around the world were visited by Caucasian races in ancient times, and that they were known as "White gods".

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White Island, County Fermanagh

White Island is an island in Lower Lough Erne, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.

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White Potato Lake Garden Beds Site

The White Potato Lake Garden Beds Site, a Native American archaeological site, is located in Brazeau, northeastern Wisconsin.

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White Tank Mountain Regional Park

The White Tank Mountain Regional Park is a large regional park located in west-central Maricopa County, Arizona.

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Whitechapel Church, Cleckheaton

Whitechapel Church, is an unusual church building located approximately half a mile north of Cleckheaton, West Yorkshire, England.

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Whitlingham

Whitlingham is a small churchless parish and hamlet at the mouth of the River Wensum in Norfolk, England.

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Whitney Battle-Baptiste

Whitney Battle-Baptiste is an American historical archaeologist of African and Cherokee descent.

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Whittington Castle

Whittington Castle is a castle in northern Shropshire, England, owned and managed by the Whittington Castle Preservation Fund.

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Who We Are and How We Got Here

Who We Are and How We Got Here is a 2018 book on the contribution of genome-wide ancient DNA research to human population genetics by the geneticist David Reich.

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Wiang Kum Kam

Wiang Kum Kam (เวียงกุมกาม; ᩅ᩠ᨿᨦᨠᩩᨾᨠᩣ᩠ᨾ) is an historic settlement and archaeological site along the Ping River, which was built by King Mangrai the Great as his capital before he moved it to Chiang Mai.

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Wick, Vale of Glamorgan

Wick (Y Wig) is a community and small village in the Vale of Glamorgan in Wales, situated approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the coast.

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Wicken, Cambridgeshire

Wicken is a small village on the edge of The Fens near Soham in East Cambridgeshire, ten miles north east of Cambridge and five miles south of Ely.

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Wicken, Northamptonshire

Wicken is a village and civil parish in the English county of Northamptonshire.

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Wiesweiler

Wiesweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wijnand van der Sanden

Dr.

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Wil Roebroeks

Wil Roebroeks is the professor of Palaeolithic Archaeology at Leiden University in the Netherlands.

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Wilbanks Site

The Wilbanks Site (9CK5) is a Late Mississippian culture Native American archaeological site in Cherokee County, Georgia, United States.

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Wilburton-Wallington Phase

The Wilburton-Wallington Phase is the name given by archaeologists to a metalworking stage of the Bronze Age in Britain spanning the period between c. 1140 BC and c. 1020 BC.

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Wild Arms (video game)

is a Western-themed role-playing video game developed by Japanese company Media.Vision.

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Wild Arms XF

is a game in the Wild Arms series, the first for the PlayStation Portable.

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Wilfred G. Lambert

Wilfred George Lambert FBA (26 February 1926 – 9 November 2011) was a historian and archaeologist, a specialist in Assyriology and Near Eastern Archaeology.

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Wilhelm Alzinger

Wilhelm Alzinger (August 11, 1928 in Vienna – January 2, 1998 in Vienna) was an Austrian classical archaeologist.

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Wilhelm Bölsche

Wilhelm Bölsche (2 January 1861, Cologne, Rhenish Prussia – 31 August 1939, Schreiberhau, Riesengebirge) was a German author, editor and publicist.

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Wilhelm Dörpfeld

Wilhelm Dörpfeld (26 December 1853 – 25 April 1940) was a German architect and archaeologist, a pioneer of stratigraphic excavation and precise graphical documentation of archaeological projects.

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Wilhelm Furtwängler

Wilhelm Furtwängler (January 25, 1886November 30, 1954) was a German conductor and composer.

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Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher

Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher (12 February 1845, in Göttingen – 9 March 1923, in Dresden) was a German classical scholar.

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Wilhelm Henzen

Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Henzen (January 24, 1816 – January 27, 1887) was a German philologist and epigraphist born in Bremen.

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Wilhelm Holmqvist

Wilhelm Egon Holmqvist (6 April 1905 – 9 August 1989) was a Swedish archaeologist, art historian and scholar.

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Wilhelm Klein

Wilhelm Klein (November 28, 1850 in Karánsebes (today Caransebeş), Hungary – 1924) was a Hungarian-Austrian archeologist.

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Wilhelm Kubitschek

Wilhelm Kubitschek (28 June 1858, in Preßburg – 2 October 1936, in Vienna) was an Austrian classical historian, epigrapher and numismatist.

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Wilhelm Reiss

Wilhelm Reiss (13 June 1838 – 29 September 1908) was a German geologist and explorer born in Mannheim.

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Wilhelm Solheim

Wilhelm G. Solheim II (1924—2014) was an American anthropologist recognized as the most senior practitioner of archaeology in Southeast Asia, and as a pioneer in the study of Philippine and Southeast Asian prehistoric archaeology.

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Wilhelm Spiegelberg

Wilhelm Spiegelberg (25 June 1870, Hannover – 23 December 1930, Munich) was a German Egyptologist.

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Wilhelm von Humboldt

Friedrich Wilhelm Christian Karl Ferdinand von Humboldt (22 June 1767 – 8 April 1835) was a Prussian philosopher, linguist, government functionary, diplomat, and founder of the Humboldt University of Berlin, which was named after him in 1949 (and also after his younger brother, Alexander von Humboldt, a naturalist).

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Willard Libby

Willard Frank Libby (December 17, 1908 – September 8, 1980) was an American physical chemist noted for his role in the 1949 development of radiocarbon dating, a process which revolutionized archaeology and palaeontology.

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Willeke Wendrich

Willemina Zwanida "Willeke" Wendrich (born 13 September 1961, Haarlem) is a Dutch and/or American Egyptologist and archaeologist.

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Willem Pleyte

Dr.

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William Allen Sturge

William Allen Sturge (1850–1919) was an English physician and archaeologist born in Bristol.

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William Andrew McDonald

William Andrew McDonald (April 26, 1913 – January 11, 2000) was an American archaeologist born in Ontario, Canada.

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William Beaumont Army Medical Center

William Beaumont Army Medical Center is a Department of Defense medical facility located in El Paso, Texas.

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William Bent

William Wells Bent (May 23, 1809 – May 19, 1869) was primarily known as a trader, and rancher in the American West, with forts in Colorado.

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William Blair Bruce

William Blair Bruce (8October 185917November 1906) was a Canadian painter.

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William Boyd Dawkins

Sir William Boyd Dawkins (26 December 1837 – 15 January 1929) was a British geologist and archaeologist.

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William Collings Lukis

Rev.

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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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William Curry Holden

William Curry Holden (July 19, 1896 – April 21, 1993), also known as Curry Holden, was an historian and archaeologist.

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William Duncan Strong

William Duncan Strong (1899–1962) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist noted for his application of the direct historical approach to the study of indigenous peoples of North and South America.

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William E. Gates

William Edmond Gates (December 8, 1863 – April 24, 1940) was an American Mayanist.

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William F Romain

William Francis Romain (born 1948) is an American archaeologist, archaeoastronomer, and author.

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William F. Albright

William Foxwell Albright (May 24, 1891 – September 19, 1971) was an American archaeologist, biblical scholar, philologist, and expert on ceramics.

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William Fairfax

William Fairfax (1691–1757) was a political appointee of the British Crown and a politician: he was Collector of Customs in Barbados, and Chief Justice and governor of the Bahamas; he served as Customs agent in Marblehead, Massachusetts before being reassigned to the Virginia colony.

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William Fash

William L. Fash, Jr. (born 1954) is one of the founders of The Copan Association, which he describes as "charged with research on and preservation of the Copan Archaeological Site, and other archaeological, cultural and natural resources of Honduras." The other founder is Ricardo Agurcia Fasquelle.

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William Frederick Wakeman

William Frederick Wakeman (1822 – 15 October 1900) was an Irish archaeologist, initially producing works as an artist and then as an author.

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William G. Dever

William G. Dever (born November 27, 1933, Louisville, Kentucky) is an American archaeologist, specialising in the history of Israel and the Near East in Biblical times.

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William Gell

Sir William Gell FRS (1 April 1777 – 4 February 1836) was an English classical archaeologist and illustrator.

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William Gowland

William Gowland (16 December 1842 – 9 June 1922) was an English mining engineer who carried out archaeological work at Stonehenge and in Japan.

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William Greenwell

Canon William Greenwell, FRS, FSA, FSA Scot (23 March 1820 – 27 January 1918) was an English archaeologist and Church of England priest.

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William H. Mounsey

William Henry Mounsey (1808–77) was a British soldier and antiquarian with an interest in Persia and Jewish culture.

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William H. Prescott

William Hickling Prescott (May 4, 1796 – January 28, 1859) was an American historian and Hispanist, who is widely recognized by historiographers to have been the first American scientific historian.

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William Hamilton (diplomat)

Sir William Hamilton (13 December 1730 – 6 April 1803) was a British diplomat, antiquarian, archaeologist and vulcanologist.

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William Hawley

Lieutenant-Colonel William Hawley (1851–1941) was a British archaeologist who undertook pioneering excavations at Stonehenge.

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William Hayes (American football)

William Quintin Hayes (born May 2, 1985) is an American football defensive end for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL).

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William Henry Boulton (author)

W.

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William Henry Holmes

William Henry Holmes (December 1, 1846 – April 20, 1933) — known as W.H. Holmes — was an American explorer, anthropologist, archaeologist, artist, scientific illustrator, cartographer, mountain climber, geologist and museum curator and director.

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William Hunt and Sons

William Hunt and Sons or WHS is a British brand of masonry tools and other types of edge tools.

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William Kelly Simpson

William Kelly Simpson (born January 3, 1928 – March 24, 2017 in New York City) was an American professor of Egyptology, Archaeology, Ancient Egyptian literature, and Afro-Asiatic languages at Yale University.

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William Lamplough

William Hardy "Bill" Lamplough (12 June 1914 – 17 January 1996)Boughey, K. 2013.

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William Ledyard Rodgers

William Ledyard Rodgers (February 4, 1860 – May 7, 1944) was a vice admiral of the United States Navy.

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William M. Bass

William Marvin Bass III (born August 30, 1928) is an American forensic anthropologist, best known for his research on human osteology and human decomposition.

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William Martin Beauchamp

William Martin Beauchamp (March 25, 1830 – 1925) was an American ethnologist and Episcopal clergyman.

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William Mitchell Ramsay

Sir William Mitchell Ramsay, FBA (15 March 1851 – 20 April 1939) was a Scottish archaeologist and New Testament scholar.

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William Mulloy

William Thomas Mulloy, Jr. (1917–1978) was an American anthropologist.

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William Niven

William Niven (2 October 1850 – 2 June 1937) was a mineralogist and archeologist noted for his discovery of the minerals yttrialite, thorogummite, aguilarite and nivenite (named after him), as well as a set of controversial tablets.

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William Pengelly

William Pengelly, FRS FGS (12 January 1812 – 16 March 1894) was a British geologist and amateur archaeologist who was one of the first to contribute proof that the Biblical chronology of the earth calculated by Archbishop James Ussher was incorrect.

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William R. Corliss

William Roger Corliss (August 28, 1926 – July 8, 2011)"William R(oger) Corliss".

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William R. Royal

William R. "Bill" Royal (March 16, 1905 – May 8, 1997) was a retired lieutenant colonel from the United States Air Force.

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William Rathje

William Laurens Rathje (July 1, 1945 – May 24, 2012) was an American archaeologist.

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William Reginald Halliday

Sir William Reginald Halliday (26 September 1886 – 25 November 1966) was a historian and archaeologist who served as Principal of King's College London from 1928 to 1952.

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William Robertson Coe II

William Robertson Coe II (28 November 1926 – 23 November 2009) was an American academic, archaeologist and Mayanist scholar, renowned for his extensive field work and publications on pre-Columbian Maya civilization sites.

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William Saturno

William Andrew "Bill" Saturno is an American archaeologist and Mayanist scholar who has made significant contributions toward the study of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization.

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William Scoresby Routledge

William Scoresby Routledge, FRGS (1859–1939) was a British ethnographer, anthropologist and adventurer.

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William Stukeley

William Stukeley (7 November 1687 – 3 March 1765) was an English antiquarian, physician, and Anglican clergyman.

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William T. Sanders

William Timothy Sanders (1926-2008) was an American anthropologist who specialized in the archaeology of Mesoamerica.

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William Talbot Aveline

William Talbot Aveline (1822–1903) was a British geologist and archaeologist.

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William W. Fitzhugh

William Wyvill Fitzhugh IV is an American archaeologist and anthropologist who directs the Smithsonian’s Arctic Studies Center and is a Senior Scientist at the National Museum of Natural History.

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William Waddington

William Henry Waddington (11 December 1826 – 13 January 1894) was a French statesman who served as Prime Minister in 1879, and as an Ambassador of France.

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William Wilde

Sir William Robert Wills Wilde MD, FRCSI, (March 1815 – 19 April 1876) was an Irish eye and ear surgeon, as well as an author of significant works on medicine, archaeology and folklore, particularly concerning his native Ireland.

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William Wilkins (architect)

William Wilkins RA (31 August 1778 – 31 August 1839) was an English architect, classical scholar and archaeologist.

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William Wyse Professor of Social Anthropology

The William Wyse Professorship of Social Anthropology is a professorship in social anthropology at the University of Cambridge.

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Willie Wilde

William Charles Kingsbury Wilde (26 September 1852 – 13 March 1899) was an Irish journalist and poet of the Victorian era and the older brother of Oscar Wilde.

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Wilson, Arkansas

Wilson is a city in Mississippi County, Arkansas, United States.

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Wilton culture

The Wilton culture is the name given by archaeologists to an archaeological culture which was common to parts of south and east Africa around six thousand years ago, during the Stone Age period.

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Wiltshire

Wiltshire is a county in South West England with an area of.

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Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society

The Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society was founded in 1853, and is one of the largest county-based archaeological societies in the United Kingdom.

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Wiltshire Museum

The Wiltshire Museum, formerly known as Wiltshire Heritage Museum and Devizes Museum, is a museum, archive and library and art gallery in Devizes, Wiltshire, England.

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Winchester, Virginia

Winchester is an independent city located in the northwestern portion of the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States.

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Windeby I

Windeby I is the name given to the bog body found preserved in a peat bog near Windeby, Northern Germany, in 1952.

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Windmill Hill culture

The Windmill Hill culture was a name given to a people inhabiting southern Britain, in particular in the Salisbury Plain area close to Stonehenge, c. 3000 BC.

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Windover Archeological Site

The Windover Archeological Site is an Early Archaic (6000 to 5000 BC) archaeological site and National Historic Landmark in Brevard County near Titusville, Florida, USA, on the central east coast of the state.

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Wine in China

Wine (Chinese: 葡萄酒 pútáojiǔ lit. "grape alcohol") has a long history in China.

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Wing, Buckinghamshire

Wing, known in antiquated times as Wyng, is a village and civil parish in Aylesbury Vale district in Buckinghamshire, England.

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Winifred Lamb

Winifred Lamb (1894-1963) was a British art historian, archeologist, and museum curator who specialised in Greek, Roman, Anatolian cultures and artifacts.

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Winscombe

Winscombe is a village in North Somerset, England, close to the settlements of Axbridge and Cheddar, on the western edge of the Mendip Hills, southeast of Weston-super-Mare and southwest of Bristol.

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Winterville Site

The Winterville Site (22 WS 500) is a major archaeological site in unincorporated Washington County, Mississippi, north of Greenville.

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Wirt H. Wills

Wirt Henry Wills, Phd, is an American Southwest archaeologist and a Professor of anthropology at the University of New Mexico.

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Witham Friary

Witham Friary is a small English village and civil parish located between the towns of Frome and Bruton in the county of Somerset.

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Witold Hensel

Witold Hensel (born March 29, 1917, died on November 22, 2008 in Warsaw) was a Polish archaeologist.

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Wittmoor bog trackway

The Wittmoor bog trackway is the name given to each of two prehistoric corduroy roads, trackway No.

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Wolfgang Ernst (media theorist)

Wolfgang Ernst (born 1959) is a German media theorist.

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Wolfgang Gockel

Wolfgang Gockel (21 November 1945 – 3 March 2005) was a German archaeologist, best known for his efforts at deciphering the Mayan hieroglyphs.

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Wolfgang Helbig

Wolfgang Helbig (2 February 1839 – 6 October 1915) was a German classical archaeologist born in Dresden.

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Wolfstein, Rhineland-Palatinate

Wolfstein is a town in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wolstenholme Towne

Wolstenholme Towne was an English settlement in the Colony of Virginia, located 7 miles east of the colonial capital, Jamestown.

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Women in ancient warfare

The role of women in ancient warfare differed from culture to culture.

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Women in brewing

Women have been active in brewing since ancient times and though Western societies have for the last 150 years viewed brewing as a male dominated field, traditionally, it was an activity engaged in by women.

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Women in Egypt

The role of women in Egypt has changed throughout history, from ancient to modern times.

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Women in Maya society

Ancient Maya women had an important role in society: beyond propagating the culture through the bearing and raising of children, Maya women participated in economic, governmental and farming activities.

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Women in the Americas

Women in the Americas are women who were born in, who live in, and are from the Americas, a regional area which encompasses the Caribbean region, Central America or Middle America, North America and South America.

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Womrath

Womrath is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Wonder Girl

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Wonderwerk Cave

Wonderwerk Cave is an archaeological site, formed originally as an ancient solution cavity in dolomite rocks of the Kuruman Hills, situated between Danielskuil and Kuruman in the Northern Cape Province, South Africa.

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Wonoboyo hoard

Wonoboyo hoard is an important archaeological find of golden and silver artifacts from the 9th century Medang Kingdom in Central Java, Indonesia.

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Woodblock printing

Woodblock printing is a technique for printing text, images or patterns used widely throughout East Asia and originating in China in antiquity as a method of printing on textiles and later paper.

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Woodcutts

Woodcutts is a hamlet within the parish of Sixpenny Handley and is located in the north of Dorset, near to the Wiltshire border.

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Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club

The Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club (or simply the Woolhope Club) is a local society devoted to the natural history, geology, archaeology, and history of Herefordshire, England.

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Worcester city walls

Worcester's city walls are a sequence of defensive structures built around the city of Worcester in England between the 1st and 17th centuries.

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Worcester Hunt Mosaic

The Worcester Hunt Mosaic is a large Byzantine floor mosaic located at Worcester Art Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts.

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World Archaeology

World Archaeology is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering all aspects of archaeology.

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World Monuments Fund

World Monuments Fund (WMF) is a private, international, non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation of historic architecture and cultural heritage sites around the world through fieldwork, advocacy, grantmaking, education, and training.

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World Trade Center site

The World Trade Center site, formerly referred to as "Ground Zero" after the September 11 attacks, is a 14.6-acre (5.9 ha) area in Lower Manhattan in New York City.

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WorldMap

WorldMap is a web platform for creating, displaying, analyzing, and searching spatial data and other data forms across multiple disciplines.

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Worthington George Smith

Worthington George Smith (23 March 1835 – 27 October 1917) was an English cartoonist and illustrator, archaeologist, plant pathologist, and mycologist.

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Wuffingas

The Wuffingas, Uffingas or Wuffings were the ruling dynasty of East Anglia, the long-lived Anglo-Saxon kingdom which today includes the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk.

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Wuhan University

Wuhan University (WHU;; colloquially 武大, Pinyin: Wǔdà) is in Wuhan, Hubei, China.

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Wulf Herzogenrath

Wulf Herzogenrath (born 23 March 1944, Rathenow, Province of Brandenburg), Germany is a German art historian and curator.

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Wunü Mountain

Wunü Shan (Korean: 오녀산 Ohnyeosan), which means mountain of Five Women, is a mountain of historical and cultural significance located in the north of the town of Huanren, in Huanren Manchu Autonomous County, Liaoning Province, China.

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Wuwei, Gansu

Wuwei is a prefecture-level city in northwest central Gansu province.

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Wyandot people

The Wyandot people or Wendat, also called the Huron Nation and Huron people, in most historic references are believed to have been the most populous confederacy of Iroquoian cultured indigenous peoples of North America.

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Wyandotte Nation

The Wyandotte Nation is a federally recognized Native American tribe in Oklahoma.

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Wye Marsh

The Wye Marsh is a wetland area on the south shores of Georgian Bay in Ontario, Canada.

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X-ray fluorescence

X-ray fluorescence (XRF) is the emission of characteristic "secondary" (or fluorescent) X-rays from a material that has been excited by bombarding with high-energy X-rays or gamma rays.

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X-ray microtomography

X-ray microtomography, like tomography and x-ray computed tomography, uses x-rays to create cross-sections of a physical object that can be used to recreate a virtual model (3D model) without destroying the original object.

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Xalîd Reşîd

Xalîd Reşîd (خالید ڕه‌شید /Xalîd Reşîd); was born in Sulaymaniyah, Kurdistan, and currently resides in Stockholm, Sweden.

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Xamontarupt

Xamontarupt is a commune in the Vosges department in Grand Est in northeastern France.

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Xanthos

Xanthos (Lycian: 𐊀𐊕𐊑𐊏𐊀 Arñna, Ξάνθος, Latin: Xanthus, Turkish: Ksantos) was the name of a city in ancient Lycia, the site of present-day Kınık, Antalya Province, Turkey, and of the river on which the city is situated.

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Xavier Guichard

Xavier Guichard (1870–1947) was a French Director of Police, archaeologist and writer.

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Xenoarchaeology

Xenoarchaeology, branch of xenology dealing with extraterrestrial cultures, is a hypothetical form of archaeology that exists mainly in works of science fiction.

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Xenobrood

Xenobrood is a fictional comic book superhero team in the DC Comics universe.

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Xia, Shang, Zhou Dynasties: from Myths to Historical Facts

Xia, Shang, Zhou Dynasties: from Myths to Historical Facts is a book by a Taiwanese history professor Olga Gorodetskaya.

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Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project

The Xia–Shang–Zhou Chronology Project was a multi-disciplinary project commissioned by the People's Republic of China in 1996 to determine with accuracy the location and time frame of the Xia, Shang, and Zhou dynasties.

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Xinmi

Xinmi, formerly Mi County, is a County-level city of north-central Henan province, China.

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Xothic legend cycle

The Xothic legend cycle is a series of short stories by American writer Lin Carter that are based on the Cthulhu Mythos of H. P. Lovecraft, primarily on Lovecraft's stories "The Call of Cthulhu" and "Out of the Aeons".

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Xunantunich

Xunantunich is an Ancient Maya archaeological site in western Belize, about 70 miles (110 km) west of Belize City, in the Cayo District.

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Xylotheque

A xylotheque or xylothek (from the Greek xylon for "wood" and "theque" meaning "repository") is special form of herbarium that consists of a collection of authenticated wood specimens.

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Y Gaer

Y Gaer is a Roman fort situated near modern-day Brecon in Mid Wales, United Kingdom.

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Ya'akov Meshorer

Professor Ya'akov Meshorer (August 14, 1935 – June 23, 2004) was the Chief Curator for archaeology at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem and a prominent Israeli numismatist.

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Yadanabon University

Yadanabon University (ရတနာပုံ တက္ကသိုလ်) is a public liberal arts and sciences university in Mandalay, Myanmar.

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Yagan

Yagan (c. 1795 – 11 July 1833) was an Indigenous Australian warrior from the Noongar people.

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Yager Museum of Art & Culture

The Yager Museum of Art & Culture is located on the campus of Hartwick College in Oneonta, New York and is open to the public during the academic year; summer hours vary.

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Yaghan people

The Yaghan, also called Yagán, Yahgan, Yámana, Yamana, or Tequenica, are one of the indigenous peoples of the Southern Cone, who are regarded as the southernmost peoples in the world.

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Yamato Province

was a province of Japan, located in Kinai, corresponding to present-day Nara Prefecture in Honshū.

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Yannis Hamilakis

Yannis Hamilakis (Γιάννης Χαμηλάκης,; born 1966) is a Greek archaeologist and writer who is the Joukowsky Family Professor of Archaeology and Professor of Modern Greek Studies at Brown University.

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Yannis Sakellarakis

Yannis A. Sakellarakis (Γιάννης Α. Σακελλαράκης; 1936 – October 28, 2010) was a prominent Greek archaeologist who specialized in Minoan Prehistory.

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Yarımburgaz Cave

Yarimburgaz Cave (Yarımburgaz Mağarası) is a cave of significant archaeological and paleontological importance, located within Istanbul Province, Turkey.

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Yarmouk University

Yarmouk University (جامعة اليرموك), also abbreviated YU is a public university, comprehensive and state supported university located near city center of Irbid in northern Jordan.

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Yatterman (film)

is a 2009 Japanese action comedy film directed by Takashi Miike and based on the anime television show of the same name.

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Yayoi period

The is an Iron Age era in the history of Japan traditionally dated 300 BC–300 AD.

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Year

A year is the orbital period of the Earth moving in its orbit around the Sun.

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Yehuda D. Nevo

Yehuda D. Nevo b. 1932 was a Middle Eastern archeologist living in Israel.

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Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone National Park is an American national park located in Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.

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Yetholm-type shield

The Yetholm-type shield is a distinctive type of shield dating from 1200-800 BC (Bronze Age).

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Yeungnam University

Yeungnam University is a private research university, located in Gyeongsan, North Gyeongsang, South Korea.

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Yigael Yadin

Yigael Yadin (יִגָּאֵל יָדִין, born Yigael Sukenik 20 March 1917 – 28 June 1984) was an Israeli archeologist, politician, and the second Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces.

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Yik'in Chan K'awiil

Yik'in Chan K'awiilThe ruler's name, when transcribed is ?-(ya)-CHAN-K'AWI:L-la, translated "K'awiil that Darkens the Sky", Martin & Grube 2008, p.48.

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Yizhar Hirschfeld

Yizhar Hirschfeld (1950 – 16 November 2006) was an Israeli archaeologist studying Greco-Roman and Byzantine archaeology.

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Yo'okop

Yo'okop is an ancient Maya city located in the Cochuah region of central Quintana Roo, Mexico.

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Yo-Jin-Bo

is a Japanese visual novel produced by Two-Five.

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Yohannes Haile-Selassie

Yohannes Haile-Selassie Ambaye (born on in Adigrat, Tigray Region) is an Ethiopian paleoanthropologist.

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York County, Virginia

York County (formerly Charles River County) is a county in the eastern part of the Commonwealth of Virginia, located in the Tidewater.

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York Museum Gardens

The York Museum Gardens are botanic gardens in the centre of York, England, beside the River Ouse.

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York River (Virginia)

The York River is a navigable estuary, approximately long,U.S. Geological Survey.

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York River State Park

York River State Park is located near the unincorporated town of Croaker in James City County, Virginia on the south bank of the York River about 10 miles downstream from West Point.

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Yorkshire Archaeological and Historical Society

The Yorkshire Archaeological and Historical Society (YAHS), formerly known as the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, is a learned society and registered charity, founded in 1863.

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Yorkshire Museum

The Yorkshire Museum is a museum in York, England.

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Yorkshire Philosophical Society

The Yorkshire Philosophical Society (YPS) is a charitable learned society (charity reg. 529709) which aims to promote the public understanding of the natural sciences, the social sciences, and the archaeology and history of York and Yorkshire.

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Yosef Garfinkel

Yosef Garfinkel (hebrew: יוסף גרפינקל; born 1956) is a professor of Prehistoric Archaeology and of Archaeology of the Biblical Period at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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Yoshihiro Senda

is a Japanese castle archeologist.

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Yotam Tepper

Yotam Tepper is an Israeli archaeologist who discovered the Megiddo church complex, the oldest Christian house of worship ever discovered, under the modern Megiddo prison.

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Younes and Soraya Nazarian Library, University of Haifa

The University of Haifa's Younes and Soraya Nazarian Library is a central academic library, among the largest in Israel.

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Youssef Hourany

Youssef Hourany (born 1931) is a Lebanese writer, archeologist and historian.

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Yozgat

Yozgat is a city and the capital district of Yozgat province in the Central Anatolia Region of Turkey.

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Yozgat Museum

Yozgat Museum is a museum in Yozgat, Turkey.

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Yuan (surname)

Yuan (袁) is a Chinese surname ranked 37th in China by population.

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Yuan Zhongyi

Yuan Zhongyi (袁仲一, born 1932) is a Chinese archaeologist.

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Yuchi

The Yuchi people, spelled Euchee and Uchee, are people of a Native American tribe who historically lived in the eastern Tennessee River valley in Tennessee in the 16th century.

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Yukon

Yukon (also commonly called the Yukon) is the smallest and westernmost of Canada's three federal territories (the other two are the Northwest Territories and Nunavut).

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Yukon Beringia Interpretive Centre

The Yukon Beringia Interpretive Centre is a research and exhibition facility located at km 1423 (Mile 886) on the Alaska Highway in Whitehorse, Yukon, which opened in 1997.

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Yup'ik

The Yup'ik or Yupiaq (sg & pl) and Yupiit or Yupiat (pl), also Central Alaskan Yup'ik, Central Yup'ik, Alaskan Yup'ik (own name Yup'ik sg Yupiik dual Yupiit pl), are an Eskimo people of western and southwestern Alaska ranging from southern Norton Sound southwards along the coast of the Bering Sea on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (including living on Nelson and Nunivak Islands) and along the northern coast of Bristol Bay as far east as Nushagak Bay and the northern Alaska Peninsula at Naknek River and Egegik Bay.

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Yupana

A yupana (from Quechua yupay: count) is an abacus used to perform arithmetic operations dating back to the time of the Incas.

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Yupik

The Yupik are a group of indigenous or aboriginal peoples of western, southwestern, and southcentral Alaska and the Russian Far East.

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Yves Morvan

Yves Morvan (French:iv moʁɑ̃; born January 13, 1932 in Uzel) is a French archaeologist, specialist of the romanesque art and of the iconography of Blaise Pascal.

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Zagreb

Zagreb is the capital and the largest city of Croatia.

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Zahi Hawass

Zahi Hawass (زاهي حواس; born May 28, 1947) is an Egyptian archaeologist, an Egyptologist, and former Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs.

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Zahna

Zahna is a town and a former municipality in Wittenberg district in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany not far from Federal Highway (Bundesstraße) B 2 and about 11 km east of Lutherstadt Wittenberg.

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Zahrat adh-Dhraʻ 2

Zahrat adh-Dhraʻ 2 or ZAD 2 is an early Neolithic archeological site north of the village of edh-Dhra on the Lisan Peninsula, in modern-day Jordan.

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Zainab Bahrani

Zainab Bahrani (زينب البحرانى) (born 1962) is an Iraqi professor of Ancient Near Eastern Art and Archaeology at Columbia University.

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Zakaria Goneim

Muhammed Zakaria Goneim (زكريا غنيم) (alt. spelling: Muhammad Zakarīya Ghunaim, 1905–1959) was an Egyptian archaeologist, known for his discoveries in and around Saqqara.

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Zamora-Chinchipe Province

Zamora Chinchipe, Province of Zamora Chinchipe is a province of the Republic of Ecuador, located at the southeastern end of the Amazon Basin, which shares borders with the Ecuadorian provinces of Azuay and Morona Santiago to the north, Loja and Azuay to the west, and with Peru to the east and south.

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Zapote Bobal

Zapote Bobal is the modern name for a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site located south of the San Pedro Martir river in the Petén department of Guatemala.

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Zarko

Zarko (Greek: Ζάρκο, also: Zarkos) is a village in the Farkadona municipality, Trikala regional unit, Greece.

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Zayandeh River Culture

Zayandeh River Culture (تمدن زاینده رود, literally "Zāyandé-Rūd Civilization") is a hypothetical pre-historic culture that is theorized to have flourished around the Zayandeh River in Iran in the 6th millennium BC.

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Zóbel de Ayala family

The Zóbel de Ayala clan is a Spanish Filipino business family with Spanish and German ancestry, who were the founders of Ayala y Compañía (now Ayala Corporation) and patrons of the Premio Zóbel literary awards.

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Zbůch

Zbůch (German Zwug) is a village and municipality (obec) in Plzeň-North District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic.

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Zbigniew Szafrański

Zbigniew E. Szafrański is a Polish Egyptologist.

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Zdeněk Měřínský

Zdeněk Měřínský (16 January 1948 – 9 September 2016) was a Czech archeologist and historian specializing in medieval archaeology, Czech and Austrian medieval history,, evolution of the settlement structure, and topography.

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Zdenko Vinski

Zdenko Vinski (3 May 1913 – 13 October 1996) was a notable Croatian archaeologist.

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Zdzisław Skrok

Zdzisław Skrok (born 1950) is a Polish archaeologist and writer.

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Ze'ev Herzog

Ze’ev Herzog (זאב הרצוג; born 1941) is an Israeli archeologist, professor of archaeology at The Department of Archaeology and Ancient Near Eastern Cultures at Tel Aviv University specializing in social archaeology, ancient architecture and field archaeology.

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Zebegény

Zebegény is a picturesque historic village in Pest county, Hungary.

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Zelia Nuttall

Zelia Maria Magdalena Nuttall (September 6, 1857 – April 12, 1933) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Zemaryalai Tarzi

Dr.

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Zetten

Zetten is a village in the Overbetuwe municipality, Gelderland, Netherlands.

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Zettingen

Zettingen is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Cochem-Zell district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

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Zheng Zhenxiang

Zheng Zhenxiang (郑振香) is a Chinese archaeologist most famous for excavating the Bronze Age tomb of Fuhao at Anyang.

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Zhoukoudian

Zhoukoudian or Choukoutien (周口店) is a cave system in suburban Fangshan District, Beijing.

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Zhuang studies

Zhuang studies (or Zhuangology; Standard Zhuang: Cuenghhag) is an interdisciplinary intellectual field concerned with the Zhuang people – their history, anthropology, religion, politics, languages, and literature.

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Zierscheibe

Zierscheibe (German for "ornamental disk") in archaeology is the term for a kind of metal jewellery dating to the European Iron Age.

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Zillertal

The Zillertal ("Ziller valley") is a valley in Tyrol, Austria that is drained by the Ziller river.

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Zimbabwean art

Zimbabwean art includes decorative esthetics applied to many aspects of life, including art objects as such, utilitarian objects, objects used in religion, warfare, in propaganda, and in many other spheres.

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Zimmerman Kame

The Zimmerman Kame (also called the "Zimmerman Site"; designated 33HR2) is a glacial kame and archaeological site in McDonald Township, Hardin County, Ohio, United States, near the community of Roundhead.

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Zinaida Reich

Zinaida Nikolayevna Reich (the last name also spelled Raikh or Raih; Зинаида Николаевна Райх; – 15 July 1939) was a Russian actress and became one of the main stars of the Meyerhold Theatre until it was closed under Joseph Stalin.

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Zipora Cochavi-Rainey

Professor Zipora Cochavi-Rainey (Hebrew: ציפורה כוכבי-רייני) born December 1954 in Petach Tikva, Israel, is a linguist and scholar in the Department of Hebrew Language at Beit Berl Academic College, Israel.

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Zliten mosaic

The Zliten mosaic is a Roman floor mosaic from about the 2nd century AD, found in the town of Zliten in Libya, on the east coast of Leptis Magna.

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Zoë Strachan

Zoë Strachan (born 1975) is a Scottish novelist, journalist and university tutor.

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Zofia Hilczer-Kurnatowska

Zofia Hilczer-Kurnatowska (1932-2013) was a Polish archaeologist.

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Zooarchaeology

Zooarchaeology (or archaeozoology) is the branch of archaeology that studies faunal remains related to ancient people.

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Zsófia Torma

Zsófia Torma (September 26, 1832 – November 14, 1899) was a Hungarian archaeologist, anthropologist and paleontologist.

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Zwolle

Zwolle is a city and municipality in the northeastern Netherlands serving as Overijssel's capital.

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ZX Spectrum

The ZX Spectrum is an 8-bit personal home computer released in the United Kingdom in 1982 by Sinclair Research.

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Zyndram's Hill

Zyndram’s Hill (pol. Góra Zyndrama) is an archaeological site located in southern Poland, in Maszkowice village, Łącko commune.

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1040s in art

The decade of the 1040s in art involved some significant events.

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1100s in art

The decade of the 1100s in art involved some significant events.

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11th century

The 11th century is the period from 1001 to 1100 in accordance with the Julian calendar in the Common Era, and the 1st century of the 2nd millennium.

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1340s

The 1340s were a Julian calendar decade in the 14th century, in the midst of a period in world history often referred to as the Late Middle Ages in the Old World and the pre-Columbian era in the New World.

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1600s in archaeology

The decade of the 1600s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1630s in archaeology

The decade of the 1630s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1640s in archaeology

The decade of the 1640s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1660s in archaeology

The decade of the 1660s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1680s in archaeology

The decade of the 1680s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1692 Jamaica earthquake

The 1692 Jamaica earthquake struck Port Royal, Jamaica on 7 June.

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1715 in science

The year 1715 in science and technology involved some significant events.

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1720s in archaeology

The decade of the 1720s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1730s in archaeology

The decade of the 1730s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1732 in science

The year 1732 in science and technology involved some significant events.

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1750s in archaeology

The decade of the 1750s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1760s in archaeology

The decade of the 1760s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1780s in archaeology

The decade of the 1780s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1787 in science

The year 1787 in science and technology involved some significant events.

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1790 in art

Events from the year 1790 in art.

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1790s in archaeology

The decade of the 1790s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1797 in science

The year 1797 in science and technology involved some significant events.

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1798 in art

Events from the year 1798 in art.

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1800 in France

Events from the year 1800 in France.

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1806 in archaeology

The year 1806 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1807 in archaeology

The year 1807 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1808 in archaeology

The year 1808 CE in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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1809 in archaeology

The year 1809 CE in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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1810 in archaeology

The year 1810 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1812 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1812 in the United Kingdom.

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1813 in archaeology

The year 1813 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1813 in France

Events from the year 1813 in France.

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1814 in France

Events from the year 1814 in France.

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1816 in art

Events in the year 1816 in Art.

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1820 in France

Events from the year 1820 in France.

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1821 in France

Events from the year 1821 in France.

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1822 in science

The year 1822 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1826 in archaeology

1826 in archaeology.

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1826 in France

Events from the year 1826 in France.

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1827 in archaeology

The year 1827 CE in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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1828

No description.

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1828 in archaeology

1828 in archaeology.

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1828 in science

The year 1828 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1829 in archaeology

1829 in archaeology.

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1830 in archaeology

1830 in archaeology.

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1831 in archaeology

The year 1831 CE in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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1833 in archaeology

1833 in archaeology.

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1834 in archaeology

The year 1834 in archaeology.

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1834 in science

The year 1834 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1835 in archaeology

The year 1835 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1836 in archaeology

1836 in archaeology.

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1837 in archaeology

1837 in archaeology.

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1838 in archaeology

1838 in archaeology.

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1839 in archaeology

1839 in archaeology.

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1839 in France

Events from the year 1839 in France.

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1840 in archaeology

1840 in archaeology.

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1840s Carrollton Inn

The 1840s Carrollton Inn and Plaza, located in Baltimore, Maryland consists of two historic buildings and their complementary 1980 additions built to resemble the previous federal style buildings.

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1841 in archaeology

1841 in archaeology.

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1842 in archaeology

1842 in archaeology.

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1843 in archaeology

1843 in archaeology.

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1844 in archaeology

1844 in archaeology.

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1845 in science

The year 1845 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1846 in archaeology

1846 in archaeology.

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1847 in archaeology

1847 in archaeology.

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1848 in archaeology

1848 in archaeology.

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1849 in archaeology

1849 in archaeology.

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1849 in France

Events from the year 1849 in France.

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1850 in archaeology

1850 in archaeology.

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1851 in archaeology

The year 1851 in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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1851 in science

The year 1851 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1852 in archaeology

1852 in archaeology.

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1853 in archaeology

1853 in archaeology.

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1854 in archaeology

1854 in archaeology.

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1855 in archaeology

The year 1855 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1856 in archaeology

1856 in archaeology.

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1857 in archaeology

1857 in archaeology.

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1858 in archaeology

1858 in archaeology.

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1858 in India

Events in the year 1858 in India.

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1859

No description.

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1859 in archaeology

1859 in archaeology.

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1860 in archaeology

1860 in archaeology.

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1861 in archaeology

1861 in archaeology.

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1862

This year was named by Mitchell Stephens as the greatest year to read newspapers.

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1862 in archaeology

1862 in archaeology.

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1862 in the United States

Events from the year 1862 in the United States.

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1863 in archaeology

1863 in archaeology.

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1864 in archaeology

1864 in archaeology.

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1865 in archaeology

The year 1865 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1866 in archaeology

1866 in archaeology.

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1866 in art

Events from the year 1866 in art.

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1867 in archaeology

1867 in archaeology.

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1872 in archaeology

1872 in archaeology.

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1872 in France

Events from the year 1872 in France.

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1876 in archaeology

The year 1876 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1881 in archaeology

The year 1881 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1881 in France

Events from the year 1881 in France.

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1882 in archaeology

The year 1882 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1882 in France

Events from the year 1882 in France.

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1883 in archaeology

The year 1883 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1884 in archaeology

The year 1884 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1885 in archaeology

The year 1885 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1886 in archaeology

The year 1886 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1887 in archaeology

The year 1887 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1887 in France

Events from the year 1887 in France.

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1888 in archaeology

The year 1888 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1889 in archaeology

The year 1889 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1889 in science

The year 1889 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1890 in archaeology

The year 1890 in archaeology.

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1890 in science

The year 1890 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1891 in archaeology

The year 1891 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1892 in archaeology

The year 1892 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1893 in archaeology

The year 1893 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1894 in archaeology

The year 1894 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1895 in archaeology

The year 1895 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1896 in archaeology

The year 1896 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1897 in archaeology

The year 1897 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1899 in Germany

Events in the year 1899 in Germany.

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1900 in archaeology

No description.

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1901 in archaeology

The year 1901 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1902 in archaeology

The year 1902 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1902 in France

Events from the year 1902 in France.

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1902 in science

The year 1902 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1903 in archaeology

The year 1903 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1904 in archaeology

The year 1904 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1904 in France

Events from the year 1904 in France.

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1905 in archaeology

The year 1905 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1905 in Wales

This article is about the particular significance of the year 1905 to Wales and its people.

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1906 in archaeology

The year 1906 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1906 in aviation

This is a list of aviation-related events from 1906.

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1906 in France

Events from the year 1906 in France.

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1907 in archaeology

The year 1907 in archaeology.

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1909 in archaeology

The year 1909 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1911 in archaeology

The year 1911 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1911 in France

Events from the year 1911 in France.

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1912 in archaeology

The year 1912 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1913 in archaeology

The year 1913 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1914 in archaeology

The year 1914 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1915 in archaeology

The year 1915 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1915 in France

Events from the year 1915 in France.

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1916 in archaeology

The year 1916 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1917 in archaeology

The year 1917 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1917 in France

This is a list of events from 1917 in France.

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1918 in archaeology

The year 1918 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1919 in archaeology

The year 1919 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1919 in France

Events from the year 1919 in France.

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1920 in archaeology

No description.

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1920 in Scotland

Events from the year 1920 in Scotland.

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1921 in archaeology

The year 1921 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1922 in archaeology

The year 1922 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1923 in archaeology

The year 1923 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1924 in archaeology

The year 1924 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1925 in archaeology

The year 1925 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1926 in archaeology

The year 1926 saw a number of significant events in the field of archaeology.

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1927 in archaeology

The year 1927 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1928 in archaeology

The year 1928 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1929 Barcelona International Exposition

The 1929 Barcelona International Exposition (also 1929 Barcelona Universal Exposition, or Expo 1929, in Catalan: Exposició Internacional de Barcelona de 1929) was the second World Fair to be held in Barcelona, the first one being in 1888.

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1929 in archaeology

The year 1929 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1931 in archaeology

The year 1931 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1932 in archaeology

The year 1932 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1933 in archaeology

The year 1933 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1934 in archaeology

The year 1934 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1935 in archaeology

The year 1935 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1936 in archaeology

The year 1936 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1937 in archaeology

The year 1937 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1937 in France

Events from the year 1937 in France.

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1937 in India

Events in the year 1937 in India.

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1938 in archaeology

The year 1938 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1939 in archaeology

The year 1939 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1940s

The 1940s (pronounced "nineteen-forties" and commonly abbreviated as the "Forties") was a decade of the Gregorian calendar that began on January 1, 1940, and ended on December 31, 1949.

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1941 in archaeology

The year 1941 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1941 in science

The year 1941 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1942 in archaeology

The year 1942 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1943 in archaeology

The year 1943 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1944 in archaeology

The year 1944 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1945 in archaeology

The year 1945 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1946 in archaeology

The year 1946 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1948 in archaeology

The year 1948 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1949 in archaeology

The year 1949 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1951 in archaeology

The year 1951 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1952 in archaeology

The year 1952 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1953 in archaeology

The year 1953 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1954 in archaeology

The year 1954 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1955

No description.

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1955 in archaeology

The year 1955 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1955 in the United States

Events from the year 1955 in the United States.

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1956 in archaeology

The year 1956 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1956 in Israel

Events in the year 1956 in Israel.

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1957 in archaeology

The year 1957 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1958 in archaeology

The year 1958 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1959 in archaeology

The year 1959 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1961 in archaeology

The year 1961 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1962 in archaeology

The year 1962 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1963 in archaeology

The year 1963 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1964 in archaeology

The year 1964 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1965 in archaeology

The year 1965 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1965 in France

Events from the year 1965 in France.

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1966 in archaeology

The year 1966 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1967 in archaeology

The year 1967 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1968 in archaeology

The year 1968 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1969 in archaeology

The year 1969 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1971 in archaeology

The year 1971 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1972 in archaeology

The year 1972 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1973 in archaeology

The year 1973 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1974 in archaeology

The year 1974 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1975 in archaeology

The year 1975 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1976 in archaeology

The year 1976 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1977 in archaeology

The year 1977 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1977 in France

Events from the year 1977 in France.

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1978 in archaeology

The year 1978 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1979 in archaeology

The year 1979 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1981 in archaeology

The year 1981 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1981 in France

Events from the year 1981 in France.

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1982 in archaeology

The year 1982 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1983 in archaeology

The year 1983 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1984 in archaeology

The year 1984 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1985 in archaeology

The year 1985 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1986 in archaeology

The year 1986 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1986 in France

Events from the year 1986 in France.

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1987 in archaeology

The year 1987 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1988 in archaeology

The year 1988 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1988 in Wales

This article is about the particular significance of the year 1988 to Wales and its people.

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1989 in archaeology

The year 1989 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1990 in archaeology

No description.

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1990 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1990 in the United Kingdom.

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1991 in archaeology

The year 1991 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1992 in archaeology

The year 1992 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1993 in archaeology

No description.

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1994 in archaeology

The year 1994 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1995 in archaeology

The year 1995 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1996 in archaeology

The year 1996 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1997 in archaeology

The year 1997 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1998 in archaeology

The year 1998 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1999 in archaeology

The year 1999 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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2000 in archaeology

The year 2000 in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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2000 in France

The following lists events that happened during 2000 in France.

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2001 in archaeology

No description.

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2002 in India

Events in the year 2002 in the Republic of India.

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2003 in France

Events from the year 2003 in France.

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2004 in archaeology

The year 2004 in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.

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2005 in Africa

No description.

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2005 in archaeology

The year 2005 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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2005 in Iraq

Events in the year 2005 in Iraq.

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2005 New Year Honours

New Year Honours were granted in the United Kingdom and New Zealand at the start of 2005.

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2006 Birthday Honours

The Birthday Honours 2006 for the Commonwealth realms were announced on 17 June 2006, to celebrate the Queen's Birthday of 2006.

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2006 in France

Events from the year 2006 in France.

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2006 New Year Honours

The New Year Honours 2006 in some Commonwealth realms were announced (on 31 December 2005) in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Grenada, the Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Belize, and Saint Christopher and Nevis to celebrate the year past and mark the beginning of 2006.

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2008 New Year Honours (New Zealand)

The 2008 New Year Honours in New Zealand were appointments by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of New Zealand, on the advice of the New Zealand government, to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders, and to celebrate the passing of 2007 and the beginning of 2008.

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2009 in Iran

Events in the year 2009 in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

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2009 in Mexico

Events in the year 2009 in Mexico.

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2010 in Germany

Events in the year 2010 in Germany.

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2011 in the United States

Events in the year 2011 in the United States.

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2012 in archaeology

The year 2012 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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2015 in aviation

This is a list of aviation-related events from 2015.

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2016 in aviation

This is a list of aviation-related events from 2016.

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375

Year 375 (CCCLXXV) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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3rd Rock from the Sun (season 6)

The sixth and final season of 3rd Rock from the Sun, an American television series, began October 24, 2000, and ended on May 22, 2001.

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6144 Kondojiro

6144 Kondojiro is an asteroid discovered on March 14, 1994 by Kin Endate and Kazuro Watanabe at the Kitami Observatory in eastern Hokkaidō, Japan.

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6th century BC

The 6th century BC started the first day of 600 BC and ended the last day of 501 BC.

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7 Most Endangered Programme

The 7 Most Endangered Programme identifies endangered monuments and sites in Europe and mobilizes public and private partners on a local, national and European level to find a viable future for those sites.

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8th millennium BC

The 8th millennium BC spanned the years 8000 through 7001 BC.

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99 Coffins

99 Coffins is a 2007 vampire novel written by David Wellington.

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Archaelogical, Archaelogists, Archaelogy, Archaelology, Archaeological, Archaeologically, Archaeologist, Archaeologists, Archeaologist, Archeological, Archeologist, Archeologists, Archeology, Archæologist, Archæology, Arheological, Conservation Archeology, Cover stone, Coverstone, Excavations, Archaeological.

References

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

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