AIA News

November 18, 2016

Promote Archaeological Discovery and Education in Your Community


Society Outreach Grants

Your support is needed to help the AIA to continue funding innovative programs, at the local level, that connect the public with archaeology. If you believe that archaeology matters, as we do, please help us to foster compelling educational activities that engage people of all ages and backgrounds with the lessons that the past can teach. Support Local AIA Societies

“I’ve never seen the Local Societies so engaged and so creative as they have been since the Society Outreach Grant Program was instituted.” – Jane C. Waldbaum, AIA Past President and Former Milwaukee Society President

CHARLOTTESVILLE SOCIETY Charlottesville Society

In 2014, the Charlottesville Local Society used their Society Outreach Grant to organize a day-long archaeology fair at the Betsy and John Casteen Arts Grounds that featured a simulated excavation, pottery reconstruction, collection showings, and book readings.

CINCINNATI SOCIETY Cincinnati Society

Thanks to the support of the AIA, in 2014, the Cincinnati Local Society hosted an archaeology fair that included pottery production lessons, a costumed Roman centurion, flintknapping demonstrations, Roman dice games, and clay-stamping activities.

GAINESVILLE SOCIETY Gainesville Society

The Gainesville Local Society premiered its new archaeology-based exhibit, First Colony, at the Florida Museum of Natural History on International Archaeology Day in 2015 thanks to AIA support. The exhibit focused on St. Augustine, the oldest continuously occupied city in North America.

SPOKANE SOCIETY Spokane Society

After receiving a Society Outreach Grant in 2016, nearly 600 people came out to attend the Spokane Local Society’s day-long event, “Rome and its Legions,” featuring a troupe of Roman reenactors demonstrating Roman culture and hosted at Gonzaga University.

SOUTHWEST TEXAS SOCIETY Southwest Texas Society

In 2013, archaeology came into the classroom for the Southwest Texas Local Society. Thanks to AIA support, they hosted an ancient writing workshop, where children could use clay, paper, wood, and other materials to learn how to write in ancient scripts.

JACKSONVILLEE SOCIETY Jacksonville Society

In only its second year of existence, the Jacksonville Local Society received an AIA Society Outreach Grant and hosted a public archaeological dig, in cooperation with Dr. Keith Ashley of the University of North Florida, allowing many members to experience their first dig.

Support Local AIA Societies

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The AIA is North America's largest and oldest nonprofit organization dedicated to archaeology. The Institute advances awareness, education, fieldwork, preservation, publication, and research of archaeological sites and cultural heritage throughout the world. Your contribution makes a difference.